This is a big year for the City of San Jose and its future. The City faces a $100 million budget deficit. Mayor Reed and the rest of the council will have to pull the proverbial rabbit out of a hat. Unfortunately, things may get worse before they get any better. Truth is, there’s no rabbit…there may not even be a hat!
Read More 19Posts by San Jose Inside
Opinion
Will San Jose Ever Be the Same?
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The City of San Jose is facing a whopping $100 million deficit for fiscal year 2010-11. Something’s got to give. Actually, a lot more than “something” has got to give, be cut, and/or taxed.
The Wall Street Journal recently ran a front page story that questioned the way in which American cities will be run and defined in the future. In his piece, reporter Conor Dougherty raised a number of issues that need to be addressed here in San Jose. Dougherty highlighted the troubles and travails of Mesa, Arizona. He cited Mesa Mayor Scott Smith’s belief that city service levels for his city will not return to prerecession levels for a long time, “if ever.” In an effort to cut costs, the City of Mesa has gone as far as to hire civilian investigators to do some after-crime reports and investigations, tasks previously done exclusively by police officers. “‘We are redefining what cities are going to be,’ says Mayor Smith.”
Read More 7Opinion
Sarah Palin to Receive Key to the City?
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Last week, Metro’s Fly reported that Sarah Palin might be coming to San Jose to speak before the Silicon Valley Chamber of Commerce. One San Jose Inside blogger promised to bring a “box of tomatoes” if she does. If Sarah Palin really does come to San Jose, should we bar our doors and hide the children?
Read More 33Business
Are The Raiders Coming To Santa Clara?
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Last week, KLIV Radio reported that NBC Sports has learned that the National Football League is encouraging both the 49ers and the Raiders to play in the proposed Santa Clara Stadium. Will the Raiders and 49ers both call Santa Clara home?
The possibility of the Raiders (or another team) making partial or full use of the Santa Clara Stadium is not really “news.” The E.I.R. and Stadium Term Sheet both allowed for the possibility. The Stadium Term Sheet reads, “49ers Stadium Company will have the right to enter into a sublease with a second NFL team, on terms and conditions consistent with and subject to the stadium lease. Conditions of repayment to the city, forgiveness of advances, and additional revenues to the City of Santa Clara are defined in the term sheet’s outline of conditions.
Read More 6Opinion
San Jose Faces Two Big Decisions
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San Jose’s movers and shakers are wrestling with two important questions. First, should the San Jose convention center expansion project move forward? And second, where should the new federal courthouse be built?
As reported on San Jose Inside last week, the city and state budget crisis has forced the city and its redevelopment agency to scale back the project from $300 million to $140 million. And, the state’s plan to pull $75 million from the San Jose RDA creates an additional hurdle. Councilmember Sam Liccardo has indicated that he is, “...not willing to do anything that puts the RDA’s future viability in peril.”
Read More 8Media
Press Drops the Ball on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed Case
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Last week, by chance I saw some of the highlights of US Attorney General Eric Holder’s testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the decision to move Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and several other of the 9/11 terrorist suspects’ trials to a court in New York. During his testimony, Mr. Holder was asked a pointed question by Sen. Lindsey Graham that, to my surprise, went missing from the Bay Area’s major newspapers’ following day coverage.
Read More 22Business
San Jose Merchants Take to the Airwaves
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Opinion
Violence Demands a Strong Response
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On Halloween night, a twelve year old was shot in the head and a thirteen year old was stabbed. The response on the part of the San Jose Police force was swift. Several suspects were taken into custody within 36 hours.
Days later, 150 people gathered together to protest these acts of violence. Big deal…there should have been 15,000 people marching, from all four corners of San Jose, demanding an end to “turf-related violence.”
Read More 13Media
Unions Control San Jose’s Budget
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Opinion
Does Redevelopment Work?
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“More than 10 cents of every dollar in property tax collected in California last year—more than $4 billion—was intercepted and spent before reaching the school districts, fire departments, municipal general funds and other agencies.” So begins real estate developer and former school board trustee Doug Kaplan’s article, “Redevelopment Boondoggle,” recently published by the San Francisco Chronicle.
Read More 6Opinion
The ‘R’ Word
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The Mercury News Editorial Board used the “R” word again. You know, “Republican.”
In their Oct. 11 editorial, the Mercury News expressed its concern that the Nobel Peace Prize committee may have provided fodder for Obama’s political opponents by awarding him this year’s prize. “The award unfortunately emphasizes one of the biggest criticisms of Obama: that he gives lovely speeches but has no record of accomplishment. The condemnation he faced Friday was swift and largely ungracious, much like a week earlier, when Republicans reacted with glee after the U.S. lost its bid to host the 2016 Olympics.”
Read More 49Opinion
Let’s Send San Jose’s Federal Stimulus Money to Kentucky
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It seems that San Jose is scheduled to receive a fair share of stimulus dollars from the federal government. But, is it really “fair” or right for one of the wealthiest regions of the country to accept federal money? I say, we should forward our money to another area of the country that is in greater need.
Read More 9Opinion
Paper or Plastic?
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The San Jose City Council is moving forward with its efforts to reduce the volume of plastic bags being used (and discarded) in the city. By now, everyone’s heard, that an estimated one million plastic bags end up in San Francisco Bay every year.
Perhaps bringing re-useable bags to the grocery store will soon become a common practice and habit that requires very little thinking. And, perhaps the new requirements will generate measurable results. But I do think that there are a couple of questions surrounding this issues that have received very little attention so far.
Read More 26Opinion
Moving Van
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There’s been a lot of chatter about the reasons why Van Jones had to leave his position as the green-jobs czar for the White House. One theory has it that Fox’s Glen Beck is to blame for his constant hammering about Van Jones’ past controversial statements. The line advanced here was that Beck was seeking revenge for being made the target of a boycott by the group, Color For Change (co-founded by Jones). Color For Change lobbied a number of advertisers to stop sponsoring Beck’s show.
Read More 8Culture
Swine Flu: Ready or Not?
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Last week, the federal government reported that 556 people have died of Swine Flu in the United States so far this year. The Center For Disease Control recently cautioned that as many as 90,000 Americans could die from the disease if precautionary methods and practices are not set in place and followed
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