Despite loss of RDA, city sticks to familiar goals for 2012
The city council’s list of goals, strategies and policies for 2012 look more like a list of chores that have to be accomplished than a lofty, ideal-laden tally of dreams or ambitions.
Crews install new downtown traffic signal
A contractor hired by the City of Morgan Hill began installing the posts, lights, wiring and other infrastructure for a new traffic signal at Monterey Road and Fourth Street this month. City staff do not yet have an estimated timeframe for when the signal will be operational, but they expect the signal to offer another “traffic calming” measure at a busy downtown intersection.“Presently, the signal poles are being installed and the wiring is being pulled through the conduits. However, we are still waiting for the signal controller cabinet to arrive. Unfortunately, until we have a firm delivery date on the signal controller cabinet I cannot provide you with a date as to when the signal will be functional,” Morgan Hill Deputy Director of Engineering Scott Creer told the Times Sept. 18.In March, the city council approved a $306,000 contract with Mike Brown Electric to install the traffic light.On July 4, 2016, a vehicle struck two children who were crossing the Fourth Street crosswalk. The new traffic light will include pedestrian crossing signals.The traffic signal is one of a number of efforts enacted by the city in recent months to improve safety for pedestrians and bicyclists in the downtown. Other recent enhancements include overhead lighting at downtown crosswalks, bright orange hand-held flags that pedestrians can carry across key intersections to make themselves more visible, resurfacing and narrowing of Monterey Road vehicle lanes and the installation of raised, painted arrows in the surface of the right travel lane on both sides of Monterey as a bicycle lane.
TUESDAY ROUNDUP: LO boys drop opener in hoops; local girls soccer teams move to 1-0
Lady Acorns, Bulldogs meet Thursday at Outdoor Sports Center
It’s not how much you save, it’s how much you earn
So, you have saved for retirement with a 401 (k) or an IRA and have been putting money into Social Security at the maximum rate. You are fortunate enough not to have to work after retirement age and are pleased that you’ve been able to accumulate enough wealth so you can retire comfortably. But, the truth behind a successful retirement is not necessarily about how much wealth you have accumulated, but turning that wealth into generating income.








