Getting Out: Unexpected adventure awaits at Emigrant Wilderness
Expecting a window of good fall weather, in mid-October I headed to Emigrant Wilderness – a place I had never visited. Set between Highway 108 and the northern border of Yosemite National Park, Emigrant Wilderness is nearly the last gasp of the polished granite alpine country characteristic of the High Sierra.
Love wine? This is the man you must meet
During the last several years of writing this column and meeting with the local wine community, one person's name always comes up in conversation. In revered tones, people ask me, “Have you heard of Steve Beck?” or “You really need to meet Steve Beck!”
Celebrating a local veterinarian
Last Saturday, a large group gathered to celebrate a birthday with one of Gilroy’s finest. Dr. James Ebaugh was one of the city’s first veterinarians, practicing for many years. I was one of the lucky ones to work with Jim after I graduated vet school. During those first years of my career, he helped me understand that veterinary medicine is more than just caring for animals. Dr. Ebaugh combined total dedication to his work with a sense of humor that’s important for survival in this high pressure job.
Christians honor Salvadoran martyr
Many of Hollister's churches share a unique ecumenical tradition, participation in a worship experience called “Holy Stir.” Several times a year members of a variety of congregations gather together to share a common liturgy of prayers, message and music.
Tips for laptop users
If you listen to the buzz about the latest technologies, you may think laptops have gone the way of the stegosaurus. But, the truth is, many of us are still using them. This may be a problem from an ergonomics perspective. The big difficulty with laptops (AKA: notebook computers or netbooks) is the keyboard and monitor are attached to one another. This creates an impossible situation. If you place the screen at a comfortable level for viewing, the keyboard and pointing device will be much too high for keying and pointing, and vice-versa. Something's gotta give! And usually it's your neck, back, arms, hands or all of the above.
‘Next Fall’: A moving look at a moment in a life
“Next Fall” is a moving story by Geoffrey Nauffts about gay rights, coming out, religion and tragedy with a mix of humor. Adam (indomitable Danny Scheie) is an avowed gay atheist who carries the heavy load of dialogue with just enough control to keep his character believable. Luke (delightful Adam Shonkwiler) is young and handsome, and raised a devout Catholic who prays for forgiveness after sex. He has not told his family about living with Adam for the past four years - but destiny has made the time and place for his coming out a hospital, where family and friends gather to hope Luke pulls through from a serious auto accident.
Planning your nursery … safety first
Your nursery or toddler's bedroom should be a fun, functional and - above all - SAFE place for your child to rest and play. Keep the following tips in mind when planning this room and you and your little one will enjoy those special early years in a safe and happy environment.
Should you take a pension buyout?
Have you recently received a pension buyout offer? If so, you need to decide if you should take the buyout, which could provide you with a potentially large lump sum, or continue accepting your regular pension payments for the rest of your life. It’s a big decision.
Morgan Hill: Where Only Some Students Succeed
Morgan Hill: Where Only Some Students Succeed Parents need more local public school choices like Rocketship Education for one simple reason: Our schools are not serving all students well. At first glance, Morgan Hill Unified schools appear to be educating all students, but in fact, they are leaving many at-risk students behind. Locally, Latino students, English Language Learners and students from low-income households scored 100 points lower on state academic tests than their Asian and white classmates. Students with special needs are also not succeeding in Morgan Hill schools. This is unacceptable. All of our students must have access to a high-quality education at a neighborhood public school. The foundation that an excellent elementary school provides to children is critical. Otherwise, students who fall behind at this young age often never catch up. Knowing this, and without improvement from the Morgan Hill Unified School District, local parents have been forced to search for alternatives for their children, including looking outside the district. Morgan Hill is a great place to live, but the quality of the education system has become a drawback for many families. We need more choices locally. Rocketship Education has an inclusion program for students with special needs. All types of students are welcome at its nonprofit public charter schools. Through its personalized learning model, all students have the ability to be challenged, supported and successful. Seventy percent of the 5,000 students at Rocketship are English Language Learners and even more are from at-risk households. Christopher is a third grader who spent four years waiting for a spot to open up at a charter school in Morgan Hill, since he was falling behind and needed extra support in English and writing. Despite having engaged parents who worked with his teachers, Christopher continued to struggle until this year, when his parents made the choice to drive 70 minutes each day to San Jose for Adam to attend Rocketship Spark Academy. He’s gone from being teased by his friends for not doing well in school to becoming a responsible leader in his class who enjoys learning. Clearly there is a need in Morgan Hill for this kind of approach to education. Rather than making it more difficult for Rocketship to open, we as a community need to do what is best for local children and give families more choices. Ethan is a fourth grader with autism attending a public school in Morgan Hill. His parents want him to be able to attend a four-year college someday, but he needs high expectations, goals and individual support to be able to get there. While he has some great teachers, he’s not learning the 21st century skills that he’ll need to be able to succeed in life. The problems local families are facing and the possible solution shouldn’t come as a surprise to local leaders. As parents, we have been vocal about what we want: We want quality school choices. We want to keep our children in neighborhood public schools. We want Rocketship to open and operate such a school. It was us, Morgan Hill parents, who reached out to Rocketship and requested that they consider opening a school in our community. It took numerous phone calls, gathering over 400 signatures and many meetings over the course of a year before Rocketship proposed opening a school here. Our dedication to providing what’s best for our children convinced them. This is an opportunity to guarantee that academic success is not given to only a subset of kids. All Morgan Hill children can and should succeed in school. Parents deserve the ability to find the right academic program for their child at a public school within this community. Rocketship is offering a proven option to serve at-risk students who are currently being left behind. Allowing Rocketship to open would give families a choice that we’ve wanted for years. Our kids can’t wait any longer. We hope you will join us in supporting Rocketship Nov. 5 when the Morgan Hill board of trustees will vote on the charter petition. Together, we can ensure that all families have quality school choices for their children and that all our students have the chance to succeed. Guest columnist Tony Saenz has been a Morgan Hill parent and resident for 44 years.
Flag-shirt fight lawyers…looks like charter school fight attorneys are next
It’s a full-fledged assault now on the charter school petitions from Rocketship and Navigator. Fascinating to watch unfold, there are “hatchet men” who likely expect to be rewarded down the line, teacher’s union petition bullies, master strategic planners and a whole bunch of folks who are wrongly becoming convinced that doom and gloom (lost jobs and the collapse of public education in Morgan Hill) are right around the corner should the County Office of Education approve the charters after the rejections of Navigator and Rocketship petitions to open schools – the latter rejection by the Board of Trustees looming just around the corner. As in any good modern American fight, the attorneys are next in line, salivating on the sidelines with thoughts of sugarplum taxpayer funded treasures dance in their heads. Everyone knows a teacher, of course. It’s the largest employee group in Morgan Hill according to the city – Morgan Hill Unified, 753 employees, Anritsu, 488. So, it’s uncomfortable stuff, especially with holiday parties ahead. But it’s too bad that cooperative learning is preached on a classroom level, but not practiced on an administrative level. The charter schools are agents for change and, if skillfully integrated into MHUSD, could lift the entire district. It’s happening elsewhere in this county, but MHUSD opted for a good old-fashioned all-out Nixonian political the-best-defense-is-a-good-offense assault, and the dust will not settle now for years to come.









