Women – Empowering Your Financial Life
Given the changing roles women are playing both within their family and within society today, married or single, it’s vital for women to be informed about their finances. While many women have a strong interest in and play a large or the lead role in managing their financial life, many don’t due to lack of interest, lack of time, or complete trust that their spouse has got the family’s financial life in order. I’m here to say that understanding the basics—including how much money they have, how much is owed and what kind of insurance coverage is in place—is critical should they decide to, or need to, take an active role in managing their family financial situation.
Making the Most of Your 401k
A 401k is a great way to save for retirement. There are tax benefits, several investment options, convenience, and if your company matches your contribution, you’re getting the impossible: free money. That’s why more and more workers are investing in a 401k. The problem, however, is that many workers are not getting the most out of their 401k’s because they don’t fully understand how it works and are unclear about their investment options. Consequently, they run the risk of ending up with a nest egg that doesn’t meet their retirement needs. Therefore, before you invest in a 401k, here are some things to consider:
Annual Kelly Freitas Memorial Golf Tournament approaching
San Juan Oaks Golf Club will host the fourth annual Kelly Freitas Memorial Golf Tournament and Dinner Party on July 11 at 3825 Union Road in Hollister.
Red phone: Blindsided by street plants
Dear Red Phone, Who is responsible for making sure plants and shrubs on the side of city streets are not creating a visibility hazard for motorists? One bad area is up and down Depot Street. As you’re exiting First, Second, Third and Fourth streets you have to pull all the way into the middle of Depot Street in order to see if any cars are coming from the north due to the vegetation between the curb and the sidewalks.Thank you, Blindsided in Morgan Hill Dear Blindsided, Morgan Hill Program Administrator Anthony Eulo said city staff are glad you asked this question for two reasons. “First, the city is happy to receive this report so we can go out to assess the situation and schedule any needed trimming. Thank you very much for bringing this to our attention,” Eulo said. “Second, your information serves as a perfect example of community engagement and how all of us are responsible for reporting conditions that may need attention by the city or a private property owner. When community members see something that concerns them, we want them to contact us to report the problem so we can address it.”In the future, you can contact city staff directly with questions or complaints about your local public works services, at [email protected] or (408) 779-7271.
City to prepare for costs of street repairs
City finances are back on a solid upward trend, but forecasts show elected officials will have to tackle some big decisions on how to augment or cut back in two key areas of public services—street maintenance and community development. Street repairs is the “more challenging” of these two issues, according to Mayor Steve Tate. The current state of Morgan Hill’s street and road infrastructure is so dire that if the city spends its current budgeted amount of $1 million per year, their condition will continue to decline, according to city staff. The city would have to increase that amount to $3 million per year just to keep the infrastructure in its current shape. But that much money is nowhere to be found with available funding sources—even if regular sales and property tax intake continues to climb as projected. That means the council could end up pleading with voters to approve a new funding source such as a sales tax, utility tax, parcel tax or neighborhood assessment districts. “We’re going to have to work with our taxpayers and voters,” Councilman Larry Carr said. City Manager Steve Rymer plans to present the council with a report identifying and prioritizing the infrastructure maintenance needs—including public properties and recreation facilities—citywide by the end of September. Tate and Carr said by then they expect the council to start talking about the best form of additional revenue, which will require significant public engagement and education. Street maintenance and construction are currently funded by a variety of existing sources, including impact fees, state gas tax, federal and state grants, voluntary residential development fees, sales and property tax, according to city staff. In 2012, the city lost a major source of street repair funds when the state shut down the Redevelopment Agency, city staff noted. And while city officials were hoping to see a proposed county transportation measure on the November ballot that would provide some funding to Morgan Hill, the measure’s sponsor will not be able to advance such a measure until the 2016 election, Tate said. “My personal preference is a utility tax because that’s something that our neighbor to the south (Gilroy) and our neighbor to the north (San Jose) have, but in past years the voters in Morgan Hill have said they don’t want that option,” Tate said. “So I’ve got to be open to other options.” In fact, Morgan Hill is the only city in Santa Clara County that does not have a local tax, according to city staff. The last time the city pushed a utility tax to the voters was in 2008. The measure would have dedicated the new revenue to more police staffing, but it was defeated soundly at the polls. The council unanimously approved the 2014-15 operating and capital budget at the June 18 meeting. The budget includes the $32.4 million general fund, $40 million in special revenue funds, $16 million in capital projects and about $43 million in enterprise funds. In the community development department, which is responsible for development services, an anticipated “structural deficit” starting in 2016 is expected due to a possible stall in development activity. Abundant residential growth in the last two years has been the result of developers catching up to a lack of activity during the 2008 recession, and that backlog is likely to run out by 2016. Carr said the sudden decline in revenues to the department is “all about the fees we bring in” from developers. “We can solve it if development continues to occur.”While city officials are unable to predict future growth, they are preparing for the imbalance. Possibly making up for a return to a more deliberate pace of residential growth could be the coming development of downtown properties formerly owned by the RDA, a proposal to develop two new hotels on Cochrane Road, new proposed medical facilities and an initiative by staff to work with Morgan Hill’s 25 largest employers to retain them and possibly help them grow. Until a clearer picture of future development is available, the city will respond to the possible drop in community development revenues by conducting a department-wide fee study over the next year or so. “In community development the whole idea is to keep the costs neutral,” Tate explained. “When we project out over a few years our current billing structure and fees, if they don’t recover (all the costs) we will have to make an adjustment.” Any shortfalls in revenues until this imbalance is solved will be covered by the community development department’s reserve fund, which has enough money to fund the department at current levels until 2018, city staff said.
UPDATE: One arrested in relation to June 20 drive-by shooting
Police are still looking for two of the three suspects who allegedly shot at two men, injuring one, while driving west on Spring Avenue in Morgan Hill the night of June 20. Authorities think the shooting, which followed a verbal argument between two groups of men, was gang-related. The suspects “should be considered armed and dangerous,” according to a June 24 press release from MHPD. Police arrested Deja Maria Ayala, 21 of Gilroy, the night of June 24, according to Morgan Hill Police Sgt. Carson Thomas. Ayala is accused of driving the gray four-door sedan from which the suspects shot the victims. Morgan Hill police responded to the area of Spring Avenue and Monterey Road about 11:14 p.m. June 20 to investigate a report of shots fired, according to the press release.As officers arrived they found two victims, including a 25-year-old Gilroy man who suffered multiple gunshot wounds to his upper torso and arm, police said. The second victim, a 29-year-old Morgan Hill man, was not injured. Officers provided the Gilroy man with first aid until fire and paramedics arrived, according to authorities. The man was later transported to a local trauma center for emergency surgery and continued care. He remains in “serious but stable” condition and is expected to survive. During the investigation officers learned an argument began between the victims and another group of males just behind Mr. Hong’s Chinese restaurant, 16745 Monterey Road, police said. The two victims attempted to walk away from the altercation, but the two male suspects continued to taunt and yell at them. As the victims were walking westbound on Spring Avenue, the two male suspects entered a gray four-door sedan which was driven by Ayala, police said. The young woman drove the vehicle westbound on Spring Avenue, and stopped abruptly near the victims. At that point multiple gunshots were seen and heard coming from inside the vehicle, police said. All three suspects fled the scene in the vehicle which was last seen in the area of Spring and Del Monte avenues, according to the press release. The suspects were later identified as Francisco Diaz, 22, Nicolas Young, 21, and Ayala, police said. All three suspects are from Gilroy. Police identified the suspects through previous “police contacts in Gilroy and Morgan Hill” and video surveillance of the area where the June 20 shooting occurred, according Thomas. Ayala turned herself in at the Morgan Hill Police department about 9:35 p.m. June 24, according to police. She was booked on suspicion of attempted murder and committing a crime while out on bail.The last shooting reported by authorities in the Morgan Hill area was in October 2012, when two men who knew each other had a verbal dispute at a home on Peebles Avenue that ended with the suspect, Mario Calderon, 33, shooting the victim in the arm. The last gang-related drive-by shooting reported by Morgan Hill police occurred Nov. 4, 2011, when five suspects allegedly shot and killed 14-year-old Tara Romero and injured three of her teen friends outside the Village Avante Apartments complex at the intersection of Cosmo and Del Monte avenues. Diaz and Young are still on the run and should be considered armed and dangerous, police said. Anyone with information about this incident can contact Morgan Hill police at (408) 779-2101 or the anonymous tip line at (408) 947-7867.
County still interested in hospitals
The county still wants to buy Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy and O’Connor Hospital in San Jose, but the Daughters of Charity—owner of six medical care facilities throughout the state—is courting prospective buyers interested in acquiring the entire nonprofit health system, according to Board of Supervisors President Mike Wasserman.










