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Dead man found in burning Gilroy house caps wild Friday the 13th

Gilroy firefighters discovered a dead man inside a burning home

CHP plans heightened enforcement over holiday

The California Highway Patrol is reminding motorists the

Hot Ticket April 12, 2013

Doll/Teddy bear show: The Crossroads Doll and Teddy Bear Show will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, 344 Tully Road in San Jose. The show will feature doll and Teddy bear experts, who will be available to identify those mysterious dolls or teddy bears living in your ‘wonder what they are worth’ closet. Also: Consignment booths, doll stringing and evaluations of repairs. Adults $7, children under 12 $4. Details: dolls4all.com.

Ducks head home with 2-0 series edge over Sharks

Stanley Cup Playoff experience is evident on the roster of the

Council nixes $130K in future OSC payments

The Morgan Hill City Council agreed to waive more than $120,000 worth of fees coming due to the city from the Outdoor Sports Center’s operating organization, in hopes of attracting a new operator for the complex.In advance of the Oct. 4 meeting, the Morgan Hill Youth Sports Alliance—which has operated the 38-acre soccer fields complex for the city for about the last nine years—asked the city to reduce its annual contracted fees from $60,000 this year and $70,000 next year, to $45,000 each year.But in an unexpected move, after a brief discussion, the council agreed to remove the fees completely as long as there are no surprises in an upcoming audit of MHYSA and OSC operations. Council members reasoned that the money is better spent on keeping the sports fields maintained and attractive for a potential new operator, which the city is currently in the process of finding.  The sports alliance has faced some financial difficulties in running the Outdoor Sports Center in recent years, due to lost revenue from annual event organizers who decided to take their tournaments elsewhere, and an unexpected, expensive repair of a well pump that serves the property on Condit Road, according to alliance Director Jeff Dixon.Because of this, the organization has had trouble making annual payments to the city. The center is currently delinquent in its quarterly payments to the city by $22,500, according to city staff.Morgan Hill Community Services Director Chris Ghione said the next audit, which is due in the coming months, is likely to show improvement in the sports center’s bookkeeping and tracking of expenses and revenues.Councilmember Rich Constantine proposed waiving the alliance’s scheduled payments to the city altogether for the next two years, after he was assured by city staff that the funds would be well-spent on maintaining the facility’s grass fields and other upkeep.“I’m mostly concerned about the field condition,” Constantine said. “If they can put that money (into facility maintenance) and show us, I’m willing to forgive the payment altogether.”Mayor Pro Tem Larry Carr added a request for the alliance to return to city staff with more details about the cost of maintenance at the center.The five-member council unanimously agreed to waive the fees for at least the current year, and possibly next year pending the results of the upcoming audit. The alliance’s current contract with the city expires after next year.“We were always going to maintain the facility to the best of our abilities,” Dixon said after the meeting. “What this gives us the opportunity to do is, maybe look at some creative things in addition to maintaining (the fields)—even enhancing it because we have more funds to do with it.”The city has already begun a “Request For Proposals” process to seek a new operator for the Outdoor Sports Center—preferably one that is committed to serving the right balance of local and regional uses of the sports fields, and has some extra funds to invest in upgrading the facility and promoting it as a major revenue generator. The alliance is not prohibited from competing in that process to remain as operator of the center.The sports center has long been a popular site for weekend soccer tournaments that bring teams from throughout the state. The alliance has added other non-traditional uses to the facility over the last nine years, including dog agility competitions, circuses, a barbecue festival and other sports such as lacrosse, cricket and flag football.Also earlier this year, the council approved $1.4 million from the city’s parks maintenance fund to replace the artificial turf on two of the OSC’s fields—one for football and one for soccer. The turf on the fields, cited by city staff as a “flagship” of the OSC, is about 10 years old and deteriorating. City officials hope this facelift will also help attract competitive bids from prospective new operators.

UPDATE: SV Islamic Community resubmits San Martin Cordoba Center plans

The South Valley Islamic Community has resubmitted plans to build a mosque, community center and cemetery in San Martin, more than three years after its previous proposal raised a stir among the rural unincorporated community’s residents.The Santa Clara County Department of Planning and Development will host a public outreach meeting on the project, known as the Cordoba Center, 7 to 9 p.m. Feb. 25 at the Morgan Hill Community and Cultural Center, 17000 Monterey Road.The applicant, SVIC, has applied for a use permit, architecture and site approval, grading approval, cemetery permit and environmental study to establish a “religious institution” on the 15.8-acre property at the corner of Monterey Road and California Avenue, reads a notice from the county.The institution would include two buildings—a worship hall and a community center— as well as the burial site, according to SVIC spokesman Hamdy Abbass.The project will require an Environmental Impact Report, which could take up to 12 months to complete, according to Santa Clara County Senior Planner Jim Reilly. He added that the latest application submitted by SVIC for the site is incomplete, and the EIR will not begin until after the application documents are finished.After the draft EIR is complete, the public will get a chance to review it, and then it will go to the county planning commission for approval or rejection.“We’re looking at a long timeline for this project,” Reilly said.The SVIC submitted almost identical plans for a worship center at the same property in 2012. Before the Board of Supervisors approved the project, numerous public hearings and informational meetings on the plans drew scores of San Martin residents opposed to the Cordoba Center.Many of these residents said they were concerned about the project’s potential impact on groundwater, traffic, storm runoff and other environmental concerns. Some opponents of the project openly voiced their hostility to and fear of Islam and its followers.Surrounding the property is mostly rural residential uses on large lots. Across California Avenue from the proposed Cordoba Center site is the Ludewig Ranch tree farm and an AT&T utility service facility. A VTA bus stop is directly in front of the site on Monterey Road.There is another large-scale project proposed by a different applicant next door to the Cordoba Center site: an RV park that would include 124 spaces for recreational vehicles, Reilly added. Residents have already raised concerns about the proximity of the Cordoba Center and RV park and the additional traffic and visits the two sites would bring to the area.After the supervisors approved the Cordoba Center project 5-0 in September 2012, a group of residents calling themselves the “People’s Coalition for Government Accountability” filed a lawsuit demanding the county rescind the use permit. The suit claimed that the county did not take a full account of the Cordoba Center proposal’s potential impact on the nearby environment in accordance with state and federal laws that mandate such accountability.The SVIC and county officials insisted the project approval followed exhaustive studies of the potential impact of the project. But the SVIC withdrew its plans in August 2013 in response to the lawsuit.“We withdrew our plans because there was no correspondence back from the people that sued,” Abbass said. “They sued under the pretense that the county did not ask us to do the due diligence. We tried to talk to them, and there was no response.”Abbass thinks the lawsuit was really about a group of residents “not wanting us to be there.”Plans for the property have changed slightly since the SVIC originally submitted them in 2012, except this time the proposed facilities are “maybe a little bit larger,” Abbass said.Previous specifications called for a 5,000-square-foot prayer hall, 2,800-square-foot multi-purpose hall, a two-acre cemetery and a children’s play area.The county notice announcing the Feb. 25 meeting says the facilities will be designed to accommodate up to 300 people for scheduled religious services with “greater anticipated capacity for occasional special events.”San Martin Neighborhood Alliance President Trina Hineser said SMNA members have not had a chance to formally discuss the project and form an opinion on it, but she hopes the SVIC communicates openly and punctually with the neighbors.“The SMNA hopes the applicant for this project would be reaching out to us and engaging with us before it gets too far along,” Hineser said.The SVIC represents about 80 families from San Jose to Hollister and beyond, and the Cordoba Center project is meant to serve their prayer and worship needs. SVIC members have also said the site could be available for community use through rentals for the future community center and special events sponsored by the SVIC.

Local scene: Value youth, celebrate Chamber

Value the Youth The annual Morgan Hill Values Youth event will take place 8:30am to 12pm Jan. 26 at the Morgan Hill Community and Cultural Center, 17000 Monterey Road. The event is free. All youth, parents/guardians and adults who work with the youth in the...

Water district will consider boycotting Arizona law

If the Santa Clara Valley Water District does any business with

Slugfest Between Angels and Marlins Ends in Tie

Darkness was the only thing that could stop the Angels and

Eclectic mix for Gav Creativity Festival

Writers, poets, painters, dancers and musicians will make

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