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Morgan Hill
April 30, 2026

Clear the Shelters free adoption event July 23 in San Martin

It’s time to “Clear the Shelters” again with the annual, nationwide free pet adoption event from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 23 at the Santa Clara County Animal Shelter located at 12370 Murphy Ave. in San Martin.

Memorial service for Kennedy scheduled for April 30

A memorial service in celebration of the life of former Morgan Hill Mayor Dennis Kennedy will take place 10 a.m. April 30 at St. Catherine Catholic Church, 17400 Peak Ave.

Loma Prieta earthquake memories still vivid

Memories of fear and trepidation in response to the Loma Prieta

County Has Bad Air Day

County ranks lowest in air quality

Centennial fund-raising under way

Funds raised will support a series of events for city

Pre-leasing begins for Vida at Morgan Hill apartment complex

Pre-leasing has begun for Vida at Morgan Hill, a new residential project that includes 389 units on a nearly 20-acre site on Jarvis Drive.  The project developer, MBK Rental Living, is inviting prospective tenants to take hard-hat tours of the construction site, according to a...

Painting the town bull

Public art continues to deck the downtown, as students from Central High School are in the midst of painting a giant mural depicting local life covering the rear outside wall of the Granada Theater. The students, working with San Jose based Empire Seven Studios, gained funding for the project through City Hall’s “mini-grant” program which includes a dozen art pieces to be completed throughout the spring.

Health plan begins construction on new South County resource center

Santa Clara Family Health Plan on July 28 commemorated the start of construction of its newest public facility, the South County Community Resource Center in Gilroy. The resource center, set to open in early 2026, will serve residents of Gilroy, Morgan Hill and San...

Mayor waits for Prime’s next move in DCHS sale

While county officials have made it clear that they disagree with the attorney general’s decision to approve the sale of Daughters of Charity Health System to Prime Healthcare, Morgan Hill mayor Steve Tate is in wait-and-see mode as the for-profit company decides whether to accept the stringent conditions tied to the $843 million acquisition.“I’m going to wait to see how it unfolds, wait to see if Prime accepts the conditions, that’s question No. 1, and if they do, how they are going to be enforced,” Tate said. “And if they don’t, what’s the next step?”Attorney General Kamala Harris’ approval of the sale with conditions came Feb. 20 after months of deliberations, research and community input meetings. The DCHS includes Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy, De Paul Medical Center in Morgan Hill, O’Connor Hospital in San Jose and four other medical facilities in California.“I wasn’t really surprised,” said Tate of Harris’ decision. “It seemed to be like she needed to approve it because there weren’t that many other options, but she needed to put conditions on it. So, it wasn’t that big of a surprise.”Supervisor Mike Wasserman has been unavailable for comment, although the county sent out a prepared statement shortly after Harris’ Feb. 20 announcement. The county submitted a bid to acquire SLRH and O’Connor Hospital, but was rejected from consideration by DCHS.“The County of Santa Clara is disappointed with the Attorney General’s decision,” the county response reads. “Regardless of the conditions placed upon Prime Healthcare, the county believes that the decision jeopardizes the health of the county’s neediest and most vulnerable residents by reducing their access to critical medical services, and by placing undue hardship on the county’s existing healthcare facilities and services to the poor and disadvantaged.”Prime officials, as well as those from DCHS, said they must carefully review all of the attached conditions, which include operating four of the DCHS facilities (SLRH among them) as acute care hospitals with emergency services and charity care for the next 10 years as well as continuing the Medi-Cal and Medicare programs for a decade.“I agree with all of them,” Tate said. “I think (Harris’ decision) brought about many more questions than it did answers.”Tate spoke with members of the community who have stake in the hospital sale and they were “universally convinced that (DCHS) had to be sold to Prime because it was the only option that would keep them employed.”Among the 12 conditions, one solely focused on the hospital workers states that Prime must assume and guarantee all pension obligations covering approximately 17,000 current and retired employees. Prime agreed to such parameters with DCHS officials prior to the Harris decision, as well as to invest $150 million in capital improvement expenditures at the facilities over the next three years.“(All the conditions) are fairly important because they all have to do with the health of our community,” Tate concluded.See this related story for all the details on Harris’ Feb. 20 announcement, including the full list of conditions for Prime’s acquisition.

Councilmen boycott closed session on medical marijuana dispensary

Three councilmen boycotted a closed session about shutting down

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