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Morgan Hill
January 22, 2026

L.A. Attorney Filed Two More Lawsuits Against Gilroy Schools

Two new lawsuits were filed Wednesday against the Gilroy Unified School District for its handling of a teacher who was allegedly “sexting” with students. Los Angeles lawyer Gloria Allred announced the suits Wednesday during a late afternoon press conference—in time for the nightly news—outside the GUSD office on Arroyo Circle.

Firefighters extinguish Morgan Hill car fire

A vegetation fire spread to a vehicle in the parking lot of a shopping center near the intersection of East Dunne Avenue and Walnut Grove Drive June 21.

Itching for summer

Even though it has been decades since I was a student, June is still that magical time when school lets out for the year, and the whole summer stretches ahead of us.

Curing summer boredom

I don’t know who invented the phrase “summer vacation” but that person was clearly not a parent. There is no vacation when the kids are out of school. Oh sure, you might take a vacation—but let’s be honest. A trip to the woods to go camping with three small children and a large dog isn’t a vacation. It’s traveling to hell in a Suburban. Without running water or an actual bed.

MHPD offers active shooter training

In light of the June 12 shooting in Orlando, Fla. that left 49 people dead and dozens more injured, Morgan Hill Police Department is offering active shooter training for local businesses and schools.

Police search for Citibank robbery suspect

Police are looking for a woman who robbed Citibank in downtown Morgan Hill Friday morning.About 11:30 a.m. June 17, an African-American adult entered the bank and approached the teller, according to Morgan Hill Police Sgt. Carlos Guerrero. The suspect handed the teller a note demanding money.The bank employee gave the robber an undisclosed amount of cash, which the suspect placed into a canvas tote bag, Guerrero said.The suspect then left the bank and walked away eastbound on Fifth Street, police said. Officers on foot and in patrol car were combing the neighborhood searching for the suspect in the aftermath of the robbery.The female adult robber is about 6 feet tall, 200 pounds, and was wearing a white jacket, black and white scarf and a dark brown or burgundy wig at the time of the robbery, Guerrero said. About 3 p.m., police released photos of the suspect from a bank surveillance video.Anyone with information about this incident can contact MHPD at (408) 779-2101.

Athletes of the Year: Sobrato’s Top Dawgs

Basketball, baseball/softball and football are the premier sports almost anywhere you go, but water polo and running have proved to be two spots where Sobrato can be mentioned among the best in CCS.

City reduces watering restrictions as supplies grow

 With local drinking water supplies reaching historic levels following four straight years of statewide drought conditions, authorities are beginning to ease up on consumption restrictions.The Morgan Hill City Council voted unanimously June 15 to loosen its drought restrictions by declaring a “level 1 water supply shortage,” lifting some residential and commercial water use limits that have been in place for more than a year. In April 2015, the council declared a “level 2” shortage in response to the statewide need to cut water consumption by 30 percent from 2013 levels.The city is still committed to keeping water use down by 20 percent from 2013, but the June 15 vote allows customers to water their yards up to three days per week, instead of just the two allowed under the level 2 restrictions, according to Morgan Hill Program Administrator Anthony Eulo. City water customers are also now permitted to wash their vehicles at home with potable water, as long as a shutoff nozzle is used.The council’s vote followed the Santa Clara Valley Water District Board of Directors’ decision, on June 14, to lower the countywide conservation target to 20 percent, from the previous goal of 30 percent.SCVWD and city staff have said the local water supply is up due to the El Nino rains of the winter of 2015-16. These rains, which Eulo classified as “normal” for the season, replenished the groundwater table on which South County relies, and filled reservoirs throughout the state—sources which dried up during the previous four years of drought conditions.“While one normal winter did not end the drought, as many reservoirs and aquifers remain in depleted conditions, it lessened the severity of the current drought,” reads a city staff report.Eulo added that SCVWD expects to set a “record in groundwater recharge” this year, by directing more water into ponds designed for “managed recharge” than they ever have before. He said the two chief aquifers serving Morgan Hill are “improving dramatically,” with one already recovered to 2013 levels and the other already surpassing the pre-drought supply.Specifically, the groundwater elevation at the Morgan Hill Index Well near U.S. 101 and East Dunne Avenue is about 295 feet, and projected to reach 330 feet by 2017. In late 2014, the elevation dropped to about 260 feet, the lowest since 2010. The Coyote Valley Well, near Santa Teresa Boulevard and Palm Avenue, is at about 270 feet in groundwater elevation, up from about 250 feet in late 2015.SCVWD Board Chair Barbara Keegan said the reduction in conservation target from 30 percent to 20 percent is “modest,” even if it is based on improving water supplies.“We are still in a drought,” Keegan said. “We don’t know if next year is going to be another dry year. Four years of drought is not erased by one year of decent rain.”Morgan Hill residents responded “tremendously” to the city’s level 2 shortage, saving almost 1 billion gallons of water since April 2015, Eulo noted.City water regulators will continue to focus on long-term water supply solutions and better efficiency, Eulo said. These include increased recycled water capacity; a landscape ordinance that reduces water used for irrigation in new and remodeled landscapes; better stormwater retention in new residential developments that allow more rainwater to percolate into the groundwater system; statewide requirements for water-saving fixtures at new homes; and drilling new wells to serve city customers.

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