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Morgan Hill
April 4, 2026

Olin continues to clean up local wells

A dozen years after authorities discovered a dangerous amount of perchlorate in the groundwater basin and fingered a local company for the widespread contamination, one of the last remaining wells affected is considered safe to drink from.

South Valley Wine Auction and Food Fest set for April 1

The 18th annual South Valley Wine Auction and Food Fest returns to the Morgan Hill Community and Cultural Center, 17000 Monterey Road, from 6 to 10 p.m. April 1 for a special evening that benefits local athletics.

UPDATED: Tarantula art piece mounted on Fourth Street parking garage

With little fanfare for its arrival early Thursday morning, Morgan Hill’s newest downtown centerpiece—yes the Fourth Street parking garage tarantula—was hoisted via crane from the back bed of a truck and ever so gently placed onto the three-story wall of the downtown structure.About a dozen residents came out to see the public art piece with their own eyes after viewing images and sketches of Napa artist Gordon Huether’s arachnid creation paid for via use-it-or-lose-it redevelopment funds—and debating its worth at public meetings and social media sites.“I think it’s beautiful. I love the color. It’s so cool,” said Judy Viegas, an administrative analyst in the City of Morgan Hill’s Community Services Department. “This is exciting for our city.”Installing the red-legged tarantula, which spans 16 feet in diameter with limbs made out of waterjet cut aluminum and a body of headlights that light up and glow at night, was no easy task for construction workers. One in particular was tasked with finagling the spider onto a mounting pipe that protruded out high on the parking structure wall and then tilting it while the crane operator helped keep it in place.“I actually think it’s really cool,” said Ali DeStasio, who works at Dr. Crowe’s medical office in the downtown. “I was looking forward to seeing it in person. It actually is cooler than I thought it would be and I’m excited to see it lit up.”A green electric extension cord could be seen dangling from the wall and eventually will hook up to the tarantula to supply power to its LED lights inside the various headlights that make up the body.But not everyone in town is a fan of the tarantula, mostly due to its six-figure cost.“It’s 200 grand and I think honestly the money could’ve gone into infrastructure or other things,” said Dan Skeen, a local resident since 1987 who was the first one out taking pictures with his camera as it was mounted. “To me, it seems out of place in our downtown. Aesthetically, it doesn’t match up with the rest of the downtown.”Morgan Hill native Jim Sergi, 58, shared similar sentiments about the spider’s place in the downtown.“200 thousand spent on a spider and no animal control service in Morgan Hill is a disgrace to the community,” said Sergi, who called for the resignation of all those involved in commissioning the public art piece for the downtown. “I think the artwork is terrible.”Mixed reviews—including some unfiltered comments about the tarantula selection—from some community members sprung up as soon as the city unveiled the idea several months back. But downtown business owner Nancy Reynolds, who, along with husband Chris, runs the Candy Parlor, was impressed with the tarantula statue that symbolized the species indigenous to the Morgan Hill area.“I think it’s awesome,” said Reynolds, who explores other cities and appreciates their public art pieces. “I think it fits in our downtown pretty well.”The parking structure, which is yet to open, consists of 270-plus parking spaces to serve downtown residents and future visitors. The $8.6-million construction contract with F&H Construction is funded by leftover Redevelopment Agency bond proceeds. The city purchased the property for the garage last year for $2.1 million from developer Rocke Garcia, also with leftover RDA cash.The project is located between Third and Fourth streets, behind Huntington Station, Trail Dust and Toto Trattoria restaurants.The contract also includes about $425,000 worth of public art. Along with the 12-foot spider sculpture, the city commissioned a 20-feet-by-12-feet glass depiction of poppy jasper, a mineral found only in Morgan Hill for the Third Street side of the garage.Despite the outcry over the cost of the artwork seen on social media and heard at the installation site and various other places around town, the city got a bargain on the garage’s public art, according to  Morgan Hill Economic Development Manager Edith Ramirez.When the city sent out a request for proposals from qualified contractors for the project in late 2014, they specifically asked for a public art component, Ramirez said. Thus all three contractors included public art proposals with their garage plans, and F & H submitted the lowest bid. None of the submitted bids included local artists in the process.Ramirez added F & H Construction negotiated the public art budget before they bid the project. Not only was their bid the lowest, but their public art proposal was the largest of the three bidders, Ramirez noted.“They offered a wall of poppy jasper art glass to enclose the plaza stairwell and the tarantula as their public art component,” Ramirez said. “The city did not choose the art. And, had the city gone with a different contractor, the total cost for the garage would have been more.”The garage project also includes about 4,000 square feet of retail and commercial space on the side facing Third Street, which will also feature a public plaza of benches, tables and wide walkways underneath a sprawling oak tree just outside the parking structure.The entrance and exit for vehicles to the structure will be on Fourth Street.

Power outage affects 1,472 Morgan Hill customers

UPDATE: As of 2:04 p.m. March 7, power was restored to all but three customers affected by this outage, according to the PG&E website. Nearly 1,500 PG&E customers are without power in north Morgan Hill, according to the utility company’s website.The outage started about 1:30 p.m., and is primarily affecting customers on the west side of U.S. 101, from West Main Avenue to Live Oak Avenue. The cause of the outage is unknown, and the PG&E website says a crew is en route to the scene to assess the cause and damage.No estimated time of power restoration is given on the PG&E website.Updates on this and other power outages in the area can be viewed at m.pge.com/#outages.

Heavy rain, strong winds forecast for South County

There’s a storm a brewin’ in South County but the heavy stuff won’t hit Morgan Hill until mid to late Saturday afternoon, according to National Weather Service Forecaster Bob Benjamin.

Local outreach needs volunteers to help with food program

Members of "I Love Morgan Hill," a charitable arm of the local Cathedral of Faith congregation, are asking for volunteers to help them distribute groceries to hundreds of needy families as part of their “Reaching Out Food Program” scheduled from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 8 at the Morgan Hill Community Center.

City to install tarantula March 3

Morgan Hill’s very own parking garage arachnid is scheduled to arrive at 8 a.m. March 3 and be installed onto its webbed perch high above on the Fourth Street wall of the downtown structure.

Morgan Hill graded a ‘C’ in annual tobacco control report

The city of Morgan Hill received the fourth highest “Overall Tobacco Control Grade” among 15 cities and the unincorporated area in Santa Clara County, according to the “State of Tobacco Control 2016-California Local Grades” report released by the American Lung Association.

An international hero

Lawson Sakai, a decorated World War Two veteran and Morgan Hill resident, recalled at the Feb. 13 annual meeting of the Friends and Family of Nisei Veterans how German artillery and mortars came crashing through the treetops of the Vosges mountains in France when his unit was in the process of rescuing the “Lost Battalion.”He said the falling branches and tree trunks in the densely wooded forest endangered him and his compatriots in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team as much as the artillery fire during the 1944 battle. He recalled the wet, muddy conditions on steep, rugged mountains that resulted in low visibility and close combat with the enemy.“We would slip and slide up the mountain, fall down, and help each other get up,” Sakai said to a crowd of about 100 guests and FFNV members at the Morgan Hill Buddhist Center. “The Germans were shooting down at us, and bullets were flying by your head… The shrapnel would come down with big chunks of trees. Many soldiers were crushed.”The Feb. 13 event in Morgan Hill featured Sakai and military historians presenting a history of the 442nd, and specifically the unit’s mission to rescue the Lost Battalion from the steep mountainsides in France.The annual meeting of the FFNV was also an opportunity for Consul-General of Japan Jun Yamada to present Sakai with the prestigious Japan Foreign Ministry Award, an honor that Yamada said was long overdue. Yamada said the citizens of Japan and the U.S. should be proud of the efforts Sakai and others have made in fostering happy relations between the two countries.The Japan Foreign Ministry Award is presented annually to “individuals and groups with outstanding achievements in the promotion of friendship between Japan and the United States,” according to the Consulate-General’s website. The 2015 recipients of the honor include four residents of northern California, including Sakai.“His whole story is great inspiration to anyone in Japan,” Yamada said. “We all have to be grateful. He’s aware of his ancestry…and we wish more people in Japan would become aware of this story.”Sakai was born in Los Angeles in 1923 and graduated from Montebello High School in 1941. He tried to enlist in the Army the day after the bombing of Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941. However, he was rejected as an “enemy alien.” Federal authorities subsequently detained Japanese-Americans on the Pacific coast in internment camps.In March 1943, the U.S. needed more troops for the war effort, and asked for volunteers to form the segregated 442nd, a unit that consisted only of Japanese-American citizens. Sakai immediately signed up, according to FFNV Vice President Brian Shiroyama’s introduction at the Feb. 13 event.“As a squad leader in E Company, Mr. Sakai fought in all major campaigns, most notable being the liberation of (the) logistically critical French town of Bruyeres, rescue of the ‘Lost Battalion’ and breaking of the Gothic Line in Italy in 1945,” Shiroyama said. “Mr. Sakai fought to prove his loyalty to this country that initially denied him of military service.”Sakai was wounded four times during World War Two, including once from gunfire during the rescue of the Lost Battalion. He was decorated with a Bronze Star.The Lost Battalion was the 141st Infantry, 36th Division of the Texas National Guard. The division’s 1st battalion, consisting of 275 American soldiers, were cut off by German forces Oct. 24, 1944, as they tried to make their way through the rugged mountains. Attempts by the 2nd and 3rd battalions to rescue the 1st failed, and the commander finally ordered the 442nd to follow suit.Two historians of the Lost Battalion and the subsequent rescue—Tom Graves and Franz Steidl—spoke about the military actions at the Feb. 13 presentation.“For two days and nights (the 141st) desperately tried to break through, but they were held off,” said Graves, author of “Twice Heroes.” “The 275 soldiers of the Lost Battalion were spread out, surrounded by German troops. They were desperate for medical supplies and ammunition.”The battalion never considered surrendering or leaving their wounded in an escape attempt, according to Graves. Instead, they hunkered down in the muddy mountainsides, waiting for backup and hoping for an accessible airdrop of friendly supplies.  “The airdrops either got tangled in trees or rolled down the steep hillsides,” he said.On Oct. 30, the 442nd broke through and rescued the Lost Battalion. Two hundred eleven of the trapped soldiers survived. The Americans suffered about 800 casualties during the rescue.Sakai was shot by enemy troops before the mission was complete, shortly after the 442nd “took the high ground,” he said.“I got hit and was taken out. I told the medic to let me die right there,” Sakai said. He woke up on a train headed to an American hospital.After returning home from the war, Sakai married Mineko Sakai of Gilroy, and owned and operated a travel agency in San Jose.When he retired, Sakai quickly became one of northern California’s most eloquent and prominent speakers on the subject of Japanese-American history and the Nisei (second generation Japanese-American) veterans’ accomplishments, Shiroyama added. He helped convince the East Bay Regional Park Commision in Oakland to plant a redwood tree in honor of the Nisei veterans in 1992, and later founded the FFNV, of which he currently serves as president.He also created a popular exhibit on the history of Nisei veterans at the USS Hornet museum in Alameda, Shiroyama continued. He is also a recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal.In another illustration of Sakai’s contribution to foreign relations, in February 2015 he was one of 10 American veterans awarded with France’s Legion of Honor pin, the country’s highest decoration. Sakai wore his red Legion of Honor pin at the Feb. 13 meeting, where he recognized Legion of Honor Officer Odette M. LePendu who was sitting in the Morgan Hill audience.LePendu was a member of the French Resistance at the age of 14 during World War Two.“Because of people like you, we were able to succeed,” Sakai told her.

More local graduates to benefit from Mushroom Mardi Gras Scholarships

Mushrooms are sprouting more scholarship money for local graduates than ever before through the annual Morgan Hill Mushroom Mardi Gras Scholarship program.

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