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Morgan Hill
June 2, 2026

Public outcry brings more pay for teachers who teach extra class

Following an outcry from teachers, parents and students, Morgan Hill Unified School District officials have changed course and decided last week that they will pay local educators what is customary when they take on an extra class period. The concerns started to boil up after...

Five request application for vacant seat on MHUSD school board

Five community members have requested the application for the

Supes split on Chavez holiday

Despite more questions and debate about how much it will cost

FFA needs equipment to cultivate Sobrato farm

The 11 acres of alfalfa in Ann Sobrato High School's backyard

Three seats up for election on Gavilan board of trustees

Three seats on the Gavilan College Board of Trustees are up for grabs in the November election, and interested candidates can start submitting nomination paperwork July 18. The deadline to qualify for a spot on the ballot is Aug. 12.The Nov. 8 election will be the first since the Gavilan board voted to transition from at-large to district elections. As a result, only two of the seats up for election are currently occupied by an incumbent. “Area 2” incumbent Jonathan Brusco of Morgan Hill is eligible to run in the new district created by the board’s April 2015 action, and Trustee Mark Dover is eligible to run in “Area 4.”There is no incumbent for the “Area 6” seat which will appear on the November ballot, according to Gavilan College spokeswoman Jan Bernstein-Chargin. That seat will serve a newly created single-member trustee area, of which there are seven on the Gavilan board.At the April 14, 2015 meeting, the Gavilan Board of Trustees amended its “Board Elections” policy, stating the intention to transition to a system of by-district trustee area elections in time for the November 2016 election. Under the new process, trustees must reside in, and will be elected by the voters in each of seven single-member trustee areas.In previous elections, voters in all parts of the college district elected trustees at-large, even though trustees resided in three areas based on K-12 school district boundaries: two trustees each from Morgan Hill and Gilroy Unified School Districts, and three from San Benito High School District.With the change to by-district voting, Gavilan’s trustees be elected in each of seven single-member trustee areas, each with a Census 2010 total population of about 24,000, according to Bernstein-Chargin.Gavilan contracts with San Benito and Santa Clara County election offices to consolidate the trustees election with the general election, Bernstein-Chargin explained.Nomination paperwork for interested candidates can be processed by contacting the election office within a candidate’s county of residence starting July 18, with a deadline of Aug. 12. Contact information for both offices is as follows: Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters, Candidate Services, 1555 Berger Drive, San Jose, CA 95112, (408) 299-8639, sccvote.org; San Benito County Registrar of Voters, 440 Fifth Street, Second Floor, Room 206, Hollister, CA 95023, sbcvote.us, (831) 636-4016.

Rotary Awards Scholarships to College-bound Students

Seventeen local high school seniors were awarded college scholarships by the Rotary Club of Morgan Hill at ceremonies on May 9.

Action-packed weekend at Sobrato HS

Student actors in the Ann Sobrato High School Theatre Society will be giving their final two fall play performances of “12 Angry Jurors” at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday inside the Sobrato Performing Arts Center

Voices, MHUSD settle squabble over $125K

Voices-Morgan Hill charter school leaders must spend $125,000 earmarked for facilities upgrades by Jan. 20, 2022 or return the funds to Morgan Hill Unified School District, per an amended agreement between the two parties. MHUSD’s board of education unanimously ratified the new terms to the...

Charter 6-12 school waiting for permits to open

A sixth-through-12th-grade charter school is just a few

Voices fond of new campus

It’s the sixth day of school and students at Voices College-Bound Language Academy are already at ease with their new surroundings. Mostly Latino students, donning the school’s trademark yellow-and-purple collared shirts tucked into their khakis, walk through the halls of the Jarvis Drive facility in an orderly, disciplined manner.

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