Letters: Homeless sweep | Others’ money | UC fixes | Letter misleads | Climate change aid

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Letters: Homeless sweep | Others’ money | UC fixes | Letter misleads | Climate change aid Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.San Jose should rethinksweeping homelessOn Thursday the city of San Jose will be sweeping the unhoused folks living in RVs at Columbus Park, getting ready to build a dog park. If their RVs don’t run, the city will crush them leaving folks with no home and with nothing. Is this inhumane? I think so.There aren’t any RV-safe parking sites. The city needs to rethink this and find a solution.Gail Anne OsmerSan JoseSpend your own moneybefore spending others’Regarding M.R.and Sujatha Pamidi’s letter(“Reparations owed by slaveholders’ descendants,” Page A6, April 4) about slaveholders’ descendants paying reparations, it is always good to hear how eager some folks are to spend other peoples’ money.No, I am not the descendant of a slaveholder, so I suppose that would exempt me from payment; however, I fail to see how demanding money from innocent people for the sins of the...

Here’s where new federal funding will be spent on California’s aging water projects

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Here’s where new federal funding will be spent on California’s aging water projects Fixed pipes. Better pumps, turbines and motors. New bypass channels. Repaired fish ladders. Refurbished valves.To improve California’s water infrastructure, more than $307 million of needed upgrades like those are included in staggeringly long to-do list of new public works projects throughout the West that will receive federal funding, Biden Administration officials announced on Wednesday.“This winter’s onslaught of devastating winter storms was just the latest in a long line of weather whiplash in California that’s overwhelmed and battered our aging infrastructure, all pointing to the need to continue to invest in our infrastructure,” said U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, who joined officials during a visit to the Imperial Dam in Yuma, Arizona.Funded by $4.3 billion in the Inflation Reduction Act and $8.3 billion in the infrastructure bill that Congress approved in a rare moment of bipartisan accord, California’s 24 projects — among 83 in 11 statesCombined, th...

County approves plans to spend another $17M to build 300 affordable units in San Jose

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

County approves plans to spend another $17M to build 300 affordable units in San Jose Santa Clara County is finalizing plans to build three new affordable housing projects in San Jose to add more than 300 desperately needed apartments for low-income and homeless residents.This week, the county Board of Supervisors approved spending up to $17.4 million to purchase the properties needed for the new developments. The projects include:The 154-unit Sunol-West San Carlos Apartments at 777 West San Carlos St. west of Highway 87 near downtown ($11.2 million)The 99-unit The Charles complex at 551 Keyes St. near Kelley Park ($3.2 million)The 60-unit Alum Rock Multifamily project at 1860 Alum Rock Ave. east of downtown between Highway 101 and Highway 680 ($3 million)The money for the projects comes from Measure A, a $950 million affordable housing bond approved by voters in 2016. In total, up to $53.8 million in Measure A funds will go toward the developments, already approved by local officials, to help cover the land purchases and building costs.Each project has also secured ...

Letters: Improving BART | Transparent trial | Big Oil giveaway | Empty promises | Studying AI | Writer’s bias

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Letters: Improving BART | Transparent trial | Big Oil giveaway | Empty promises | Studying AI | Writer’s bias Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.Improving BART startswith firing managersRe: “BART watchdog to get a budget boost” (Page B1, March 30).Good to see BART is feeling some pressure to finally deal with some of its issues. But what took so long?Oh, they’re running out of money, that’s why. Obviously, BART management is part of the problem. Some or all need to be replaced for effective reform and leadership going forward.Mike KujacichLivermoreTrump trial mustbe transparentThe historic and unprecedented indictment of a former president of the United States will go down as one of the most historic events in our nation’s history. Under the current political polarization, I certainly hope that the future trial will be conducted in the most transparent way possible, on live television. At a minimum, the cameras should be rolling anytime the jury is in the room so everyone gets to see the same evidence as the jury.I can’t h...

NAACP, community groups demand accountability after SJPOA exec fentanyl bust

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

NAACP, community groups demand accountability after SJPOA exec fentanyl bust SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) -- A local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People joined other community groups for a press conference in San Jose on Wednesday afternoon. The groups are coming together in response to the federal criminal complaint filed against a leader of a local police union. Rider dies after being ejected from motorcycle on Hwy-1 Last week, the San Jose Police Officers Association Executive Director Joanne Segovia was charged in connection with importation of illegal opioids, including fentanyl. The complaint was released after Segovia allegedly used personal and office computers to order drugs-- including fentanyl-- for nearly eight years. Shipments of illegal drugs were reportedly mailed to her home from countries including Hong Kong, Hungary and India, the Department of Justice writes. Joanne Marian SegoviaNow, community groups are asking for more accountability. The Asian Law Alliance Executive Director Richard Konda was one of th...

Catalytic converter thieves caught in Santa Rosa after traffic stop

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Catalytic converter thieves caught in Santa Rosa after traffic stop (KRON) -- Two people were arrested and found with a stolen catalytic converter in Santa Rosa on Wednesday, the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office said on Facebook. Police said there were also open cans of alcohol and methamphetamine in the suspect vehicle. The car was pulled over in the area of Todd Road and Stony Point Road at about 1:20 a.m. for an expired registration. After the traffic stop, police learned that the driver of the car did not have a driver's license and the passenger was on pre-trial release for weapons violations. Alameda car thief caught in the act: police In addition to the drugs and the catalytic converter, police found tools used to commit crimes. Among those tools were several "bump keys," which SCSO explained are keys that are shaved down to fit into locks they aren't intended for. SCSO also recovered bolt cutters, wire cutters, sawzalls and more tools used to cut catalytic converters. Two glass pipes and 16.7 grams of suspected meth were found as well. The...

Alameda car thief caught in the act: police

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Alameda car thief caught in the act: police (KRON) -- A suspect was in progress of a car theft early Wednesday morning before officers caught them in the act, according to the Alameda Police Department. Around 3:30 a.m., officers were called to an in-progress vehicle theft on the 2200 block of Santa Clara Avenue. 65 catalytic converters reported stolen in one month: Alameda PD However, when officers arrived, they did not find any vehicles in the area. Alameda police later found the victim's car being pulled by the suspect vehicle with tow straps near Clement Avenue and Park Street.The victim car (pictured above) is a white Dodge Challenger. Police said the Dodge owner was unaware of the middle-of-the-night theft. Alameda police contacted the owner and got a tow truck to being the car back to the owner's home.Last month, KRON4 reported there were 65 reported catalytic converter thefts and 62 reported vehicle thefts in Alameda during a 30-day span. Alameda police said the most stolen vehicles were Hyundai Elantra. Hyundai Sa...

SailGP to make Los Angeles debut, return to New York

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

SailGP to make Los Angeles debut, return to New York The SailGP global league will make its Los Angeles debut as well as return to New York during Season 4, which will feature 12 regattas on four continents.The expanded schedule, announced Wednesday, will feature four regattas in the United States starting with the season opener off Chicago’s Navy Pier June 16-17. It will be followed by SailGP’s first visit to Los Angeles on July 22-23, with the sailing in souped-up, 50-foot foiling catamarans to be held in the steady breezes on the Port of Los Angeles’ Outer Harbor. The Outer Harbor is near Long Beach, which hosted sailing for the 1984 Olympics and will do so again for the 2028 Games.Season 4 will conclude with regattas in New York on June 22-23, 2024, and the Grand Final in San Francisco on July 13-14, 2024.There’s still one regatta to go in Season 3, set for San Francisco May 6-7. Two-time defending champion Team Australia, skippered by Tom Slingsby, has all but clinched a spot in the $1 million winner-take-all Grand Final, with Ne...

The Hunt: Who was Khalid Aydd Ahmad al-Jabouri?

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

The Hunt: Who was Khalid Aydd Ahmad al-Jabouri? In this week’s edition of “The Hunt with WTOP national security correspondent J.J. Green,” Dr. Hans-Jakob Schindler, senior director of the Counter Extremism Project, said ISIS leader Khalid Aydd Ahmad al-Jabouri was a shadowy figure. toggle audio on and off change volume download audio Who was the senior ISIS leader killed in Syria? $(function () { $('.wtop-audio-container .fa-play').on('click', function(){ var audio_filename = $('div.wtop-audio-file').data("mp3-url"); ga('send', 'event', 'Audio', 'play', audio_filename); }); }); SIGN UP TODAY for J.J. Green’s new national security newsletter, “Insi...

Revelan video de cámara corporal que capturó la muerte de Dalaneo Martin a manos de la policía

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:48:57 GMT

Revelan video de cámara corporal que capturó la muerte de Dalaneo Martin a manos de la policía La Policía de Parques de EEUU (USPP por sus siglas en inglés) reveló el martes un video de cámaras corporales que muestra como un oficial le disparó mortalmente a Dalaneo Martin, de 17 años, dentro de una camioneta SUV que presuntamente robó en Washington, DC. En el video revelado por la policía, se puede ver las diferencias entre los procedimientos de las dos agencias del orden que respondieron – la USPP y el Departamento de la Policía Metropolitana – en los momentos críticos antes del tiroteo mortal. Según las autoridades, los oficiales de DC encontraron a Dalaneo Martin dormido dentro de un SUV encendido después de que recibieron informes de un auto sospechoso cerca de las calles 34th Street y Baker Street, en el noreste del Distrito sobre las 8:50 a.m. el 18 de marzo. Los uniformados luego determinaron que el vehículo era robado, pidieron refuerzos, y dos agentes de USPP luego respondieron. En una sección del video publicado el martes, los uniformados se pueden ver dis...