Transgender woman seeks rules of engagement on dating scene
DEAR ABBY: I am a 30-year-old transgender woman who has just started her journey. Feeling more comfortable in my skin, I have been going to some local hangouts with some friends from work and meeting straight men. My question is, when is it appropriate to disclose that I am a preoperative trans woman?
Book delivers tips on religious etiquette
With the remarkable diversity of today's society, it's not
Gilroyan pens ‘Old Hope Road’
Matthew Carvalho, of Gilroy, is a first-time, self-published author and “Old Hope Road” is his first novel. “Old Hope Road” follows the life of Dominic Mercy, an orphan who makes his home on a fictional Caribbean island. Mercy is Defense Attaché to the island's president. Following a political conspiracy, an unknown group attacks the presidential palace. As the conspiracy unfolds, Mercy's childhood and rise to the highest office is revealed through a series of flashback vignettes. This sparks a desire to find his 'kin'. Author Carvalho, who works as a manager for a Silicon Valley medical equipment manufacturer, has a bachelor’s degree in international relations and a master’s degree in diplomacy/global commerce. “Old Hope Road” is available in both paperback and Kindle formats through Amazon. The author welcomes fans to follow “Old Hope Road” on Facebook.
Ballers place third in fifth-grade nationals
The fifth-grade Gilroy and Morgan Hill Ballers placed third in the National Junior Basketball All-Net National Tournament in Irvine
$10,000 reward offered for Sierra LaMar’s safe return
The family of Sierra LaMar offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to her safe return Saturday.
Twins share a birthday, but shouldn’t have to share gifts
DEAR ABBY: I'm the proud mother of four beautiful children -- a daughter, a son and 8-year-old twin boys. I am having a hard time getting people to understand that my boys, whom I rarely refer to as "twins," are two SEPARATE people! Every year at Christmas some family members buy gifts for our daughter and our eldest son, and then ONE gift our younger boys are expected to share. Abby, they once received one T-shirt, which was meant for both of them. This also happens on their birthday.
Business Trends: Cochrane Plaza to Generate $76M in Annual Sales
With the grand opening of Target July 29, I thought it would be helpful to recap the economic benefit of Cochrane Commons to the city. Well, the city will receive sales tax revenue from the center. Phase I will consist of about 255,000 square feet. To account for the fact that not all of the space is leased up and not all the space is retail per se, let's assume the center will generate on the average about $300 per square foot in annual sales (i.e., some businesses will generate more per square foot than others). That equates to about $76.5 million in annual sales which translates to $765,000 in sales tax revenue to the city. If we assume 60 percent of those sales are "new sales" as opposed to recaptured sales (e.g., Target is not generating all new sales since it had an existing store), the city would receive about $380,000 in new sales tax revenue to the general fund. This could be used for any purpose such as funding police officers, parks maintenance, or recreational activities. This illustrates why the Cochrane Commons is so important to the community from an economic development perspective.
SE Quad plan goes to LAFCO
With one of their colleagues doubting they will be able to preserve a vast amount of farmland, the Morgan Hill City Council approved the long simmering Southeast Quadrant annexation, land use and agricultural preservation plan last week.The council voted 3-1 July 15 to send the plan to the Santa Clara County Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCO), which will be tasked with the effort’s ultimate approval. Councilmember Rich Constantine voted against the plan, and Councilmember Marilyn Librers was absent from the meeting.The complicated plan required a series of 10 separate votes by the council. These include:• Amending the city zoning code to include an agricultural mitigation plan and a new “sports/recreation/leisure” land use classification;• Extending the “urban service area” boundary in the SEQ;• Requesting of LAFCO the annexation of 215 acres into the city limits;• Pre-zoning a 38-acre parcel “public facilities” where the San Jose Diocese plans to build the South County Catholic High School;• And applying the new SRL classification to several private properties in the SEQ.Constantine voted “no” to each item in succession at the July 15 meeting. He noted that the many agencies and environmental groups that are likely to be affected by and involved in the plan have repeatedly said the city’s SEQ document falls far short of its stated goals to preserve agriculture and open space. These include LAFCO staff, the county itself, the Santa Clara Open Space Authority and private nonprofits.Constantine stressed after the July 15 meeting that he is not opposed to sustainable, responsible development nor the SEQ plan as a concept.“I don’t want to stop the process,” Constantine said. “We are saying we want to promote agriculture and open space, yet the main groups that are responsible for those entities say we’re going about this in the wrong way. I have a problem with that.”He added that the agricultural mitigation program is unlikely to achieve its goals. This program would require developers to pay a per-acre fee that would go toward the permanent preservation of an equal acreage of farmland on which they plan to build.“To say that you’re going to take acreage in the Southeast Quadrant and mitigate acreage that’s already in the Southeast Quadrant, that doesn’t make any sense,” Constantine added.The SEQ is about a 600-acre patchwork of farmland and large residential lots on the east side of U.S. 101, roughly bound by Maple, Foothill and San Pedro avenues. For the better part of the last decade, the city has been working on the SEQ development and preservation plan that was finally approved July 15.Projects proposed in the SEQ are a large-estate planned development to be built by the Chiala family, which plans to preserve up to a five-to-one ratio of agriculture on their project; the Catholic high school at the northeast corner of Murphy and Tennant avenues; and a city-sponsored baseball/softball facility at Tennant Avenue and the U.S. 101 interchange. Existing sports uses in the SEQ are the Outdoor Sports Center and the Aquatics Center, both owned by the city.The LAFCO board has not yet agendized the city’s requests for an upcoming meeting, but is expected to do so in the coming months.





