55.6 F
Morgan Hill
March 30, 2026

Sheriff’s blotter: Three stolen vehicles recovered

Here is the recent arrest log recorded from the Santa Clara County Sheriff's substation in San Martin.

Farmers, labor commissioner reach agreement on fines

Local growers of Chinese vegetables who faced potentially crippling penalties for what they called minor, accidental and one-time labor violations reached a settlement agreement with state regulators, according to legal advocates.The California Labor Commissioner’s Office is still working on finalizing the settlement paperwork and declined to comment, office spokesman Peter Melton said. An attorney who has been working with the growers to reduce or eliminate the fines she calls unfair confirmed that the fines originally imposed last year on Morgan Hill farmers Xay Duc Hoang, Fanny Tam and Siu Wah Mok were reduced by 80 percent.Specifically, that means Hoang’s original fine of $9,000 was reduced to $1,800; Tam’s fine was reduced from $5,000 to $1,000; and Mok’s fine was dropped from $1,500 to $300, according to the attorney Janelle Orsi of the Sustainable Law Economies Center. The penalties were imposed after the farmers were cited by state labor regulators from the California Department Labor Standards Enforcement in summer 2013. The citations were issued following inspections of each farm, and were for violations such as providing incomplete information on their employees’ pay stubs. Orsi and other advocates for the farmers complained that the original fines were unreasonable, and in some cases even applied illegally due to incorrect information provided by inspectors on citations. Plus, the farmers - who speak little English - were not provided the opportunity to explain or contest the DLSE’s claims on-site because they were not offered adequate translation services. Still, labor regulators have a long way to go before their citation and penalty procedures are fair to all employers in California, Orsi said. “It is a relief that these matters are finally closed and that we will not need to work on any additional litigation,” Orsi said. “However, the outcome still feels unjust. For example, Mr. Hoang is still paying a fine of $1,800 for a very small clerical error, and this is on top of all his legal fees and travel expenses to attend hearings.” Orsi said a “better outcome” would have been to reduce the fines to an amount equivalent to that of a parking ticket, because the growers were cited for “harmless and inadvertent” errors. “And I strongly believe the DLSE should reform its enforcement practices, so that farmers do not need to struggle through the arduous appeal process to defend against unfair fines,” Orsi continued. Furthermore, DLSE’s fine schedule is “unconstitutionally excessive,” Orsi added. Orsi’s intern is in the process of writing a guide for employers on how to comply with state labor codes and prepare proper wage statements, and Orsi hopes the DLSE will include something similar on its website. The Sustainable Law Economies Center is a nonprofit organization that offers legal education, research, advice and advocacy for “just and resilient economies.” 

Woman on rebound wants back in ex’s court

DEAR ABBY: After a two-year relationship ended, I got pregnant on the rebound. I called my ex and told him I was having a baby with another man because I wanted to hurt him. Apparently it worked -- at least that's what his best friend told me.

How’s The Real Estate Market?

One of the most (if not the most) asked question of a real estate agent is regarding how the market is doing.  The answer depends largely on the intent behind the question.  If you are simply making conversation, you may get more of an answer than you counted on.

DA: local caregiver ‘steals from clients…again’

A South Bay caregiver was sentenced this week to jail for stealing tens of thousands of dollars worth of jewelry and other valuables from her elderly clients, according to a press release from the Santa Clara County Deputy District Attorney’s Office.

Shannon Bushey named Registrar of Voters

Interim Registrar of Voters Shannon Bushey has been named Registrar, according to a press release from the Santa Clara County Office of Public Affairs. 

Hearing for Lhermine continued to March

A hearing for the Morgan Hill man accused of sexually assaulting multiple small children under his care at a YMCA facility was continued Tuesday at South County Courthouse in Morgan Hill. Nicolas Lhermine, 20, appeared at the hearing wearing handcuffs and an inmate’s jumpsuit. He remains in custody at Santa Clara County Jail without bail on charges of lewd and lascivious acts with a child younger than 12, oral copulation on a child younger than 10, possession of child pornography and production of child pornography. All the charges are related to five victims identified since his arrest in July, according to authorities. Lhermine is accused of making inappropriate sexual contact with or taking illegal obscene photographs of the victims. Judge Alfonso Fernandez set Lhermine’s next hearing for 9 a.m. March 7 at South County Courthouse.Four of the alleged child victims were age 7 or younger at the time of the assaults - which occurred last summer - and were victimized by Lhermine while they were under his care a child care program at Paradise Valley Elementary School, according to investigators. The child care program was operated by the YMCA, for whom Lhermine worked for four years before his arrest. The youngest of the victims is 3 years old, authorities said. The fifth alleged victim is a 17-year-old girl of whom investigators found nude pictures on Lhermine’s mobile phone, according to police. The girl was not affiliated with the YMCA program, but Lhermine knew her. Lhermine was arrested by Morgan Hill police July 12, when a 6-year-old girl under his care at the YMCA program told her parents and investigators that Lhermine forced her to engage in a sex act in the bathroom at the day care site, authorities said. During the initial investigation, police found the pictures of the 17-year-old girl on his phone. During a follow-up investigation which included assistance from YMCA staff to reach out to the parents of all children who had ever been under Lhermine’s care at the YMCA, authorities identified three more alleged female victims - ages 3, 5 and 7. Lhermine faces a maximum sentence of life in prison, according to authorities.The suspect worked as a child care aide at the YMCA day care facility during the alleged assaults, and has held numerous positions - including youth soccer coach and child care at other YMCA facilities - in his four years of employment at the YMCA, according to authorities.

Adam and Jennifer Henig: Better late than never

She was late. Five more minutes and I was going to leave. We hadn't spoken on the phone yet; we only communicated through eHarmony, the dating website that we met through.

Garry and Brooke Bailey: How Garry and I met

“All I wanted to do was cross-country ski!” says my husband of 27 years, after my best friend set us up on a blind date when I lived in the San Bernardino mountains in Southern California and had separated from my first husband. Little did Garry know what he was getting himself into!

Bob and Nancy Wells: Proposal after two weeks

Bob, a California boy, was assigned to attend the Microwave Radio Officer’s course at Fort Monmouth, N.J. He decided to go to church, so he looked in the Yellow Pages. Since he didn't know the meaning of Methodist and Presbyterian, he chose the Christian Church of Colts Neck.

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