VTA eases eligibility for paratransit services
The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) has
Final vote: music series to move to amphitheater
After a chamber of commerce board revote, the Friday Night Music
Vintage to custom creations, car show highlights classics
To most spectators they are cars, but their owners might call
Swimmers take the plunge
Dozens of brave Morgan Hill residents took the Polar Bear Plunge challenge at the Dennis Kennedy Aquatics Center Jan. 14.Thirty-four participants started off the chilly event by wading or running into the center’s 50-degree recreational pool, where they each tried to grab a toy polar bear off miniature “icebergs” floating throughout the pool. Aquatics Center Coordinator Lisa Rick made the icebergs herself by freezing turkey pans full of water before the event.Next, participants could choose to “complete the challenge” by conquering the Aquatics Center’s inflatable obstacle course in a separate, heated pool, Rick said. Then they could take their time warming up in the center’s instructional pool, which is heated to 85 degrees.“We gave out hot chocolate and medals to all the participants,” Rick said.It was the third annual Polar Bear Plunge sponsored by the City of Morgan Hill at its Aquatics Center, located at 16200 Condit Road.Organizers planned the Polar Bear Plunge as a fun wintertime activity for local families, Rick said.
B-I-N-G-O!
The atmosphere is tense, quiet, yet electric like a high stakes casino game. A light "dob dob" sound can be heard from large ink markers called daubers hitting the thin paper, then the "B-5" announcement. And suddenly, BINGO!
MHPD: Officer saved unresponsive resident’s life
Morgan Hill Police Officer Todd Davis quickly applied his training and a donated portable resuscitation device to save an elderly resident’s life earlier this month, according to authorities.Davis was on patrol Oct. 4 when a call from the emergency dispatch center came over the radio reporting a medical aid incident at a home in Morgan Hill. While firefighters and paramedics were on their way, Davis said as soon as he heard the initial call, he looked up and he happened to be “right there,” outside the residence where the emergency was reported.“I was already out of my vehicle and in my trunk,” gathering his medical bag seconds after he heard the call from dispatch, he said.The call was related to a 77-year-old woman who was unresponsive and not breathing, according to police. Davis arrived at the scene “well before fire and paramedics,” reads an Oct. 12 press release from MHPD.“Time is the main factor” in such medical emergencies, Davis, 38, said. “You’ve got to hurry up and get them breathing, with chest compressions” and other first-aid.Davis entered the woman’s home as her “panicked” caretaker was performing Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR), he told the Times. He intervened in the resuscitation effort with an Automated External Defibrillator, which all on-duty MHPD patrol officers carry in their patrol vehicles.“My main focus was to bring calm, and start handing out directions,” he said. Davis, who began his career as a police officer about four years ago at MHPD, quickly applied the AED and continued performing CPR on the elderly woman for about five minutes, until paramedics arrived and took over.The story ended happily moments later, as the woman’s pulse returned shortly after paramedics arrived, Davis said. “She was talking by the time she got to the hospital,” he added.Davis said it “feels awesome” to know the woman survived the emergency and is on her way to recovery.“This is why you do it,” said Davis, who served in the U.S. Army for six years before becoming a police officer. “Far too often, the person doesn’t make it, and this is one of the rare instances where your efforts pay off. It feels wonderful.”Davis and MHPD also credited the the Morgan Hill Community Law Enforcement Foundation and Racing Hearts organization for helping, through donations, to place AEDs in local patrol vehicles. “That’s a new tool we’ve just had in the last year,” Davis said.For more information about CLEF, visit morganhillclef.org. For more information about Racing Hearts, visit racinghearts.org.
Letter: This isn’t FUND anymore!
Regarding the article, “Morgan Hill Schools Face Layoffs as District Cuts Millions” (Morgan Hill Times, March 22), it states that MHUSD faces a budget deficit resulting in $5.5 million of staff reductions, due to the end of the one-time Covid-19 funds. As a member...
Letter: Caltrain numbers don’t justify added VTA expenditures
I’ve seen the June South County Caltrain ridership numbers (Monday-Friday, four trains north in the morning and four trains south in the evening): Gilroy 126 riders/day; San Martin 22 riders/day; Morgan Hill 104 riders/day; Blossom Hill 68 riders/day; Capitol 45 riders/day.
It's not fiscally responsible...
Two Morgan Hill students to be honored at Giants’ game
The San Francisco Giants’ players will not be the only stars on the field at AT&T Park prior to Saturday’s game against the Baltimore Orioles.
Area housing market still shaky
When you're tumbling downhill, even a little flat ground seems















