VOTER ★ GU DE ★ 14 ★2 0 ENDORSEMENTS 22 | LOCAL MEASURES 14 OCTOBER 10, 2014 VOLUME 22, NO. 37 www.MountainViewOnline.com 650.964.6300 MOVIES | 28 Council moves ahead with office-heavy San Antonio plan PRECISE PLAN COULD ADD 3,000 JOBS AND 1,200 HOMES By Daniel DeBolt O VERONICA WEBER Members of the 129th Rescue Wing of the California Air National Guard confer at a briefing before launching “Soaring Angel” training missions out of Moffett Field last week. Air Guard runs rescue training at Moffett By Veronica Weber O n a dry, dusty lot at Moffett Field, next to Hangar 4 and the airfield’s runway, a series of temporary tent structures were set up as command central for about 150 troops from the California Air National Guard’s 129th Rescue Wing participating in operation “Soaring Angel.” The four-day long tactical training exercise ran from Oct. 2 to 5. Troops performed intensive search-and-rescue and personnel recovery training missions that simulated wartime deployment at the base in Mountain View, Fort Hunter Liggett in Monterrey County and San Clemente Island in Los Angeles County. Servicemen from the Rescue Wing’s mission support group, flight operations, maintenance, medic support, as well as the See SOARING ANGELS, page 11 El Camino Healthcare District THREE CANDIDATES COMPETE FOR TWO HEALTH CARE DISTRICT SEATS By Kevin Forestieri T he El Camino Healthcare District is poised to have its second contested election in a row after a decade of no competition at the ballot box. To fill two open seats on the district board of directors, voters this November will choose among a neurologist, a City Council member who will be leaving her post in December, and a long- INSIDE VOTER ★ GU DE ★ 14 ★2 0 time district incumbent. Challengers Margaret AbeKoga, a Mountain View City Council member, and Dr. Peter Fung, director of the stroke program at El Camino Hospital, are running for the district board along with incumbent David Reeder, who is seeking a fifth term. Board member Patricia Einarson is not seeking another term. Board members oversee the El Camino Healthcare District, which comprises Mountain View, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills, as well as parts of Sunnyvale, Palo Alto and CuperSee EL CAMINO, page 16 VIEWPOINT 22 | GOINGS ON 29 | MARKETPLACE 30 | REAL ESTATE 32 n Tuesday night the City Council decided it was prudent to add office space for 1,000 employees to the precise plan for the San Antonio shopping center and surrounding area, for a total 3,000 new jobs in an area slated for 1,245 new homes. The move was a change in course after members of the Campaign for a Balanced Mountain View called on the council to prioritize housing in the plan, which council members supported in July, to reduce the city’s worsening housing shortage and traffic. In response, city staff proposed capping office development at 400,000 square feet, but requiring that 620 housing units be constructed after the first 200,000 square feet of office development, and 625 units after an additional 200,000 square feet of office are built. That would be enough for 2,000 office jobs in the plan at 200 square feet per job — and would allow 1,620 employed residents to live in the plan area in 1,245 homes. Council members didn’t like the staff’s plan, voting at the Oct. 7 meeting to get rid of the phasing and to raise the office cap to 600,000 square feet, adding space for another 1,000 employees. Council members Ronit Bryant and John McAlister were opposed to the move and member John Inks recused himself because he owns property nearby. “Of all of the places in Mountain View to have office, this is the best situated near mass tran- sit and housing,” said council member Mike Kasperzak, who proposed ditching the phasing and raising the cap to 600,000 square feet. He said office development could be reduced elsewhere in the city to compensate. “For me I’d rather have 400,000 square feet here and reduce (office space by) 400,000 (square feet) in North Bayshore,” Kasperzak said. Council member Bryant raised concerns that the city would see too much focus on office growth without the phasing, but member Jac Siegel and others said the phasing could mean one office developer would have to depend on what another housing developer does. “What I heard from residents is there’s way too many offices in the plan,” Bryant said. “I heard, ‘Stop building offices.’ North Bayshore is not the place for housing, San Antonio is the place for housing. The cap and the phasing is difficult to take, but staff has given us what we asked for.” City staff said they had selected the 400,000 square foot cap “because this amount of office development would create approximately the same number of jobs as there would be working residents in the Plan Area’s projected housing units.” While a large number of residents called for making housing a priority in the plan in June and July, council candidate Lenny Siegel was the only resident at Tuesday’s meeting expressing concern about the lack of housing. “Mountain View cannot See SAN ANTONIO, page 21 JUDY SHERI 650. 207.2111 judytanigami@gmail.com BOGARD-HUGHES 650. 279.4003 shughes@apr.com CINDY CalBRE# 00298975 CalBRE# 01060012 CalBRE# 01918407 BOGARD-TANIGAMI BOGARD-O’GORMAN 650.924.8365 cbogardogorman@apr.com ConsultantsInRealEstate.com N OPE SUN DAY 0 -4:3 0 1:3 26171 Moody Road Los Altos Hills An exceptional Vineyard Villa • Classic Mediterranean villa bordered by a Chardonnay vineyard • Two levels with elevator, 4 bedrooms, office, and 4.5 baths • Approximately 5,700 square feet of living space* • Lot size of approximately 1.2 acres* • Luxurious and spacious public rooms on the main level • Home theatre, second family room, sauna, and wine cellar • Whole-home audio system and programmable lighting • Attached 3-car garage with extra storage • Sun-swept rear grounds with pool and spa, barbecue center, and huge terrace • Approximately 140 vines of Chardonnay grapes • Top-rated Los Altos schools: Gardner Bullis Elementary, Egan Jr. High, and Los Altos High (buyer to verify enrollment) *buyer to verify Offered at $5,498,000 www.26171MoodyRoad.com rice g P rs! n i k e r As ple Off e v lti dO Sol ith Mu w 13418 Carillo Lane Los Altos Hills Outstanding Opportunity! Palo Alto Schools • Remodel or expand on this sunny knoll top property with views to the bay (TOPO map available) • 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms with approximately 1,800+ square feet of living space* • Peaceful setting on approximately 1 acre lot* • Light-filled living room with floor to ceiling windows and wood burning fireplace • Family room/office with built-in shelving and backyard access • Eat-in kitchen with abundant cabinetry and double ovens • Air conditioning, recessed lighting, and ample closet space • Separate workshop room adjacent to two-car garage • Convenient location in lower hills with easy access to commuter routes • Top-rated Palo Alto schools include: Nixon Elementary, Terman Middle, and Gunn High (buyer to verify enrollment) *buyer to verify Offered at $2,195,000 www.13418CarilloLane.com 2 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 Voices A R O U N D T O W N Asked in downtown Mountain View. Photos and interviews by Madeleine Gerson and Natalia Nazarova. What is your opinion of organic products? “I try to choose organic products for eggs and meat because of the quality of life of the animals. I would rather them have a decent quality of life rather than (have) commercially farmed products.” Mara Wildfeuer, Mountain View “I got an email today that organic food will make your life long. So I will start buying organic food.” Sachi Motumal, Mountain View “I think sometimes they are hard to come by and they also sometimes go bad faster. If they were available in more places I would buy them more.” Emilia Fenton, Palo Alto “We are happy to not have pesticides in the food chain, so it’s nice to purchase organic products when they are available. Although they are more expensive, it is worthwhile.” Craig Haggart, Sunnyvale Smiles Dental Care Loves Referrals! Refer A Friend, Family Member, or Co-Worker & Smiles Dental Will Donate $25! 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E-mail Email itit to to editor@mv-voice.com editor@mv-voice.com October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 3 LocalNews QCRIMEBRIEFS BURGLARY SUSPECT ARRESTED Police recently arrested a man believed to be the suspect who broke into a Mountain View home last month, slept there, stole several items and left the next morning. Police contacted the man, identified as 26-year-old Orlando Rivera, on Sept. 27 when he was walking down Castro Street at around 10 a.m. Rivera was arrested on suspicion of burglary and booked into San Jose Main Jail on $50,000 bail. Rivera had allegedly forced his way into the residence at the 200 block of Church Street sometime between Sept. 22 at 3 p.m. and Sept. 23 at noon and slept inside. When he left the next day, he took a coat, ski pants and two sleeping bag straps, according to the Mountain View Police Department website. Police say Rivera returned to the residence on Sept. 24 shortly before 3 a.m., but could not enter the building because of repairs made to the interior door. Video surveillance of the incident, provided by the homeowners, shows footage of Rivera entering and exiting the property. The footage helped police identify the suspect, and ultimately led to the arrest, according to the police website. SERIAL PUNCHER ARRESTED Police arrested a man Sunday whom they believe is the suspect who punched victims unprovoked in Mountain View late last month. See CRIME BRIEFS, page 7 QPOLICELOG AUTO BURGLARY GRAND THEFT 2400 block Charleston Rd., 10/2 1100 block N. Rengstorff Av., 10/2 1100 block N. Rengstorff Av., 10/2 1000 block Grant Rd., 9/30 RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY 400 block Chagall St., 10/2 BATTERY STOLEN VEHICLE Hope St. & Villa St., 10/3 1 block Sierra Vista Ave., 10/3 400 block Moffett Blvd., 10/3 COMMERCIAL BURGLARY 200 block Castro St., 10/1 100 block Ferguson Dr., 10/2 1000 block El Monte Ave., 10/2 1 block W. El Camino Real, 10/3 600 block Ellis St., 10/3 400 block Moffett Blvd., 10/2 800 block N. Rengstorff Av., 10/3 100 block W. Dana St., 10/6 700 block Continental Cir., 10/6 VANDALISM 500 block Church St., 10/1 2000 block California St., 10/2 LEADERSHIP, ACADEMICS, CHARACTER & SERVICE P RESCHOOL E LEMENTARY M IDDLE SCHOOL SCHOOL Private Preschool through 8th Grade 30 years of academic excellence in a family friendly environment SCHOOL TOURS Saturday, Nov. 8th - 10 a.m. www.LACS.com RSVP: LaSha.Heard@lacs.com 625 Magdalena A]L3VZ(S[VZ*( 4 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 LocalNews MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE Q CITY COUNCIL UPDATES Q COMMUNITY Q FEATURES Salem is top fundraiser in council election CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATES’ WAR CHESTS RANGE FROM $930 TO $33,000 By Daniel DeBolt ment complexes in Mountain View. There’s also the Mountain he nine residents running View Housing Council (MVHC), for three City Council a political action committee that seats in the November council members say is made up election have some very different mostly of apartment owners. Margaret Capriles reported the fundraising styles, as revealed in their reports of campaign contri- most donations from landlord groups, a total of $1,500. Kamei butions received by Sept. 30. The biggest fund-raiser so far took in $1,250, while Rosenberg is attorney and newcomer to and Showalter each received Mountain View politics Mer- $750. In candidate interviews cedes Salem, who raised $24,829. Sometime before June she loaned with the Voice, Rosenberg and herself $8,000, bringing her total Capriles were the most vocal to $32,829. She told the Voice that opponents of bringing rent conshe doesn’t plan to spend more trol to Mountain View, while than the city’s voluntary expen- Showalter and Kamei didn’t take a solid position. diture limit of No candidates $22,030. In keepsaid they were in ing with MounLandlords favor of seeking a tain View’s tradirent control ordition of relatively inexpensive coun- appear to be the nance. PG&E has also cil campaigns, all biggest single donated money to nine candidates this year’s counhave agreed to the type of donor cil candidates, expenditure limit. giving $250 each The next highin this year’s to Pat Showalter est fund-raiser and Ellen Kamei. is Ellen Kamei, election. Ken Rosenberg policy aide to says he was nearly county Supervisent a check from sor Joe Simitian, who reported raising $21,288 in PG&E, until PG&E saw on his donations as of Sept. 30, the last campaign website that he supday covered by the most recent ports “community choice aggrecampaign finance filing period. gation,” a legal mechanism cities Candidates Lisa Matichak, Pat can adopt to allow residents to Showalter, Margaret Capriles opt to collectively buy electricity and Ken Rosenberg all raised generated from cleaner, carbonbetween $15,000 and $17,500, free wind and solar energy while Lenny Siegel, with a large sources — in competition with number of smaller donations, PG&E. A group of Mountain raised $8,040. Jim Neal and View residents are already meetGreg Unangst reported that they ing to discuss the possibility, and are largely paying for their cam- have set up a website: carbonpaigns themselves, with Unangst freemountainview.org Rosenberg explained at Monloaning himself $21,000 and day’s Old Mountain View NeighNeal loaning himself $830. The bigger contributors to borhood Association candidate more than one candidate include forum that PG&E called his landlords, labor groups, Demo- home to say, “We’re not going to cratic Activists For Women Now send him (Rosenberg) a check and PG&E. Landlords appear because he supports community to be the biggest single type of choice aggregation.” Besides the usual banners, lawn donor in this year’s election, as they have been in past elections, signs, door hangers and mailers, contributing $4,250 in total. candidates typically spent several This includes the California thousand dollars on newspaper Apartment Association (CAA) and newsletter ads, with some — which represents apartment buying digital ads. Neal reported owners in Mountain View, and paying $229 to Facebook for ads, Todd Spieker, a real estate investor who owns numerous apartSee FINANCE, page 15 T NATALIA NAZAROVA HAVE DIRNDL, WILL CELEBRATE Mountain View’s second annual Oktoberfest brought a little bit of Germany to downtown Oct. 4 and 5. Hosted at Stein’s Beer Garden, there was music, dancing, pretzels and plenty of German beer. From left, Jannifer Butler, Noelani Neal, Rachelle Abbey, Jassica Maxey and Samantha Cardenas dance along to tunes from Alpiners USA, while wearing costumes from left over from Palo Alto Players’ “Young Frankenstein” production. Preschool racks up funds for new site 5K ‘FUN RUN’ FUNDRAISER EVENT AT SHORELINE By Kevin Forestieri T he Mountain View Parent Nursery School has raised big bucks in an effort to move to a new location next year, coming up with nearly $300,000 in donations. Now the preschool is in the final stretch of their funding goal, and will keep up the pace with a 5K “fun run” at Shoreline Park. The morning event will be at the Kite Field at Shoreline Park on Saturday, Oct. 11, and will include a 5K run at 8:30 a.m. and a “tot trot” walk at 9:30 a.m. The event will also have a Halloween costume theme, face painting and raffles. The preschool started its “School-on-the-Move” fundraiser earlier this year when it was announced that the Mountain View Parent Nursery School and Parent Observation, both preschools that are housed on Mountain View-Los Altos Union High School District property, would have to move in order to make room for high school district expansion plans. Next year, both preschools will move to a vacant lot adjacent to the Foothill Covenant Church — just across the street from the Mountain View High School See PRESCHOOL, page 6 Big bucks for one water board candidate By Sue Dremann T wo candidates vying for Palo Alto voters in the Santa Clara Valley Water District Board race are spending vastly different sums of money on their campaigns, with the challenger, Gary Kremen, outspending incumbent Brian Schmidt by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Kremen, founder of Match. com, is financially smoking incumbent Brian Schmidt to the tune of more than $280,000. Much of it is in loans to the campaign of Kremen’s own money. Schmidt has raised roughly $13,000, according to campaigndisclosure statements both filed in Santa Clara County on Monday. The two filings reveal a considerable difference in approaches, with Kremen’s campaign listing $303,067.50 in outstanding debts and Schmidt’s balance sheet listing none. The filing statement, which covers the period from July 1 through Sept. 30, includes the totals for the year to date and a list of donors. Kremen has loaned his cam- paign $248,500, according to his filing; Schmidt has no loans, instead relying on small donations largely from retired people, individuals and a few environmental groups. He has donated $500 to his own campaign, according to the filings. By contrast, Schmidt lists $8,209.05 in total expenditures with a $4,972.78 ending cash balance; Kremen lists $312,764.03 in total expenditures with $22,614.63 in ending cash. Email Sue Dremann at sdremann@mv-voice.com October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 5 LocalNews FREE COMMUNITY EVENT PRESENTED BY THE SARATOGA SENIOR CENTER AND EL CAMINO HOSPITAL Saturday, October 18, 2014 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. West Valley College, The Campus Center • 14000 Fruitvale Avenue, Saratoga Register in advance to be entered to win an iPad. To pre-register, call 800-216-5556 or visit www.elcaminohospital.org/svhwexpo FEATURING • Booths with physician experts specializing in: – Senior health – Behavioral health – Orthopedics – Sleep disorders – Cancer – Pelvic health – Primary care – Spine care – Cardiology – Ear, nose and throat – Reconstructive surgery – Urology/Men’s health – Rehabilitative services – Women’s health – Memory loss – Neurology • Demonstrations of innovative medical technology: Artemis 3D imaging and navigation for prostate biopsies, GreenLightTM Laser therapy for BPH, and orthopedic implants for joint replacement • Free skin assessments and flu shots • Live cooking demonstrations, tastings, and take-home recipes HEALTH INFORMATION ON A VARIETY OF TOPICS INCLUDING • • • • Senior health resources Exercise & wellness Financial planning Community & social services www.elcaminohospital.org 6 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 www.sascc.org PRESCHOOL Continued from page 5 campus, and a short walk from the current location. So far the preschools have raised over $295,000 of the $380,000 needed to pay for estimated project costs, which includes grading the land, installing utilities, lifting and relocating two portable classrooms and installing a third classroom at the new site. The fundraising goal jumped from $200,000 to nearly double in June after they lost an expected line of credit. The preschools have received “tremendous” support from its parents and alumni as well as family and friends, according to Marie Faust Evitt, a teacher at the Mountain View Parent Nursery School. One grandmother of a preschool student pledged $20,000 to match donations, Evitt said, and an alumni dad pledged another $7,500. The fundraiser is run by volunteer parents involved with the preschools, including Salila Sukumaran, who said they weren’t likely to get much traction with a Kickstarter campaign that relied on donations from strangers. Instead, they focused on reaching out to current and former families of from the preschool going back anywhere from 30 or more years. The preschools were slated to move in June, but were given another year to set up utilities like plumbing and electricity at the new site. It also gave the preschools much-needed time to continue raising funds for the move. Though the preschools still need to raise upwards of $80,000 and are well beyond their previous fundraiser deadline of June 30, they have proceeded with the first phase of construction. Evitt said they are working with architects to finalize plans and prepare the new site, and will move over the portable classrooms in June. The move will give the high school district more room to expand on the parcels currently occupied by the two preschools, next to the softball field near Alta Vista High School and Mountain View High School. Superintendent Barry Groves said enrollment is projected to grow by 20 percent in the next five years, and with it comes a growing need for the facilities currently occupied by the preschools. The district plans to use the facilities to expand Alta Vista High School and offer a place for the district’s career technical education program, Groves said. Email Kevin Forestieri at kforestieri@mv-voice.com LocalNews Three Los Altos schools win National Blue Ribbon award CHARTER SCHOOL, TWO JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS HONORED FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE By Kevin Forestieri T he U.S. Department of Education named nine Bay Area schools as National Blue Ribbon Schools last week, including Blach Intermediate School, Egan Junior High School and Bullis Charter school. The National Blue Ribbon Schools Program recognizes elementary, middle and high schools for exemplary performance in one of two categories: high standardized tests scores or improvements in closing the achievement gap, according to the U.S. Department of Education website. Only 24 schools in California were recognized as Blue Ribbon schools this year. Sandra McGonagle, principal of Blach, said it’s been an exciting few years for the school. She said they applied to become a California Distinguished School a few years ago, which Blach won, and just last week became one of the few National Blue Ribbon Schools in the entire state. She said Blach fell under the “Exemplary High Performing Schools” category, and credits the community of Los Altos for pouring so much time and money into their schools. She said school officials also credited the “fantastic” teachers and staff, who she said strive to improve and don’t settle for where they’re at. In a press release by the Los Altos School District, school board president Tamara Logan said Blach and Egan both foster a strong connection between students and staff, and offer “coordinated academics, creative extracurriculars, physical education and social opportunities” that lead to successful students. “We are very proud of these schools,” Logan said. Superintendent Jeff Baier said the schools have been recognized nationally for their hard work and sustained excellence, and serve as models of what junior high school should be. He said it’s also a testament to the “outstanding” work at all the elementary schools in the district that filter into both Blach and Egan. Some elementary schools have been named Blue Ribbon Schools in the past as well. Oak Elementary was recognized as a Blue Ribbon School in 2012, and Santa Rita Elementary in the early 1990s. Bullis Charter School Principal Jocelyn Lee said she is proud that the school’s programs have been recognized. She said the charter school has maintained a focus on innovation in education, and introduced a STEAM curriculum — science, technology, engineering and math curriculum with an added emphasis on the arts — as well as personalized learning tailored to individual students. Lee said the charter school is committed to giving students a well-rounded education, and want to share their techniques and experience. Baier and site administrators from all three schools will travel to Washington, D.C. on Nov. 11 for an official ceremony. Bullis Charter School celebrated the announcement on Oct. 3 when students, parents and staff came to school wearing blue, the school color, and plan to celebrate again closer to the award ceremony. Email Kevin Forestieri at kforestieri@mv-voice.com COURTESY OF EMILY NELSON Bullis Charter School second-graders pose for a selfie with their teacher after getting the news of the school’s Blue Ribbon award. Students and teachers wore blue on Friday, Oct. 3, to celebrate. AVENIDAS PRESENTS THE 11TH ANNUAL CAREGIVER CONFERENCE FINDING YOUR PATH ON THE CAREGIVING JOURNEY SATURDAY, OCT. 18 8:30am-3:30pm QCRIMEBRIEFS Continued from page 4 The man, identified as 27-year-old Russell Kershaw of San Jose, is believed to have punched a 63-year-old man in a parking lot at Phyllis Avenue and Grant Road on Sept. 26 at 4:50 p.m, according to Mountain View police. The victim was aided by witnesses until fire and medical personnel arrived, and he was taken to a local hospital for a facial laceration. Two days later, a Sunnyvale man was punched outside of Erik’s DeliCafe at 1350 Grant Road at 11:36 a.m. by a man with a similar description, who approached the victim from behind and struck him in the head. The victim’s eye area was swollen, and he complained of cheek pain, according to Sgt. Saul Jaeger of the Mountain View Police Department. With help from a Santa Clara Police Department officer, Mountain View police identified Kershaw as a suspect, and witnesses made a positive identification of him in both assaults. Kershaw was located and arrested by police on Oct. 5, and booked into San Jose Main Jail on charges of battery, battery with serious bodily injury and dissuading a witness. His bail is set at $55,000. Kevin Forestieri At this info-packed event, you’ll enjoy: ©4VYUPUN*VɈLL6YHUNL1\PJL ©2L`UV[L(KKYLZZ*HYLMVY[OL *HYLNP]LY;OL5L\YVIPVSVN`VM :[YLZZ ©/LHS[O9LZV\YJLZ>VYRZOVWZZ\JO HZ4LTVY`3VZZ4LKPJH[PVUZ 0U[LY]LU[PVUZ ©3LNHS:\WWVY[>VYRZOVWZ3P]PUN>PSSZ ;Y\Z[+\YHISL7V^LYZVM([[VYUL` ©*HYLNP]LY>LSSULZZ>VYRZOVWZ ;LJOUPX\LZ[V0UJYLHZL1V` ©(ɉUP[`.YV\WZ9LZWP[L*LU[LY;V\Y ©(JJLZ[V:WVUZVYZ+VVY7YPaLZ ©)V_LK3\UJO:WLJPHS[`*VɈLL*HY[ *OVJVSH[L;YLH[Z ALL FOR ONLY $35 BEFORE 10/4, TOOLS FOR POSITIVE AGING So call (650) 289-5435 or visit www.avenidas.org to register Event at Mountain View Senior Center & Avenidas Rose Kleiner Center H[ ,ZJ\LSH(]LPU4V\U[HPU=PL^ -9,,7(9205. October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 7 LocalNews Council OKs union wages for maintenance By Daniel DeBolt W STA NFORD WOMEN’S C A NCER CENTER QUA RTERLY TA LK SERIES Latest advances in breast cancer SPE AKERS Mark D. Pegram, MD The Stanford Women’s Cancer Center invites you to a free community talk. Join us and learn from Stanford Medicine physicians about: Breast Medical Oncologist • Genetic testing and high risk screening options Amanda Wheeler, MD • Mammography, tomosynthesis, MRI and other technologies driving early detection • Advances in treatments and adjunct therapies to surgery Breast Surgery Rahim Nazerali, MD, MHS Reconstructive Plastic Surgery Jafi Lipson, MD Radiology Breast Imaging Courtney Rowe-Teeter, CGC Cancer Genetics Stanford’s breast cancer experts will share the latest information and answer your questions. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16 • 6:30PM – 8:00PM Sheraton Palo Alto (Justine Room) 675 El Camino Real • Palo Alto, CA Parking validated RSVP at: stanfordhealthcare.org/events or call 650.736.6555. This event is free and open to the public. Please register, seating is limited. 8 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 orkers who are contracted to maintain, repair, upgrade or demolish city structures are now going to be guaranteed prevailing wages, the City Council decided Tuesday. The move was made in response to a new state law, SB7, which requires that charter cities such as Mountain View use prevailing wage requirements — which favor union contractors — if they want state funds for capital projects. The city has received $2.7 million in such funds since June 2011. The city already requires prevailing wages for public works construction contracts, but Tuesday’s move extends it to contracts that involve “maintenance, repair, alteration, and demolition” of city structures. “Given that the city already has prevailing wage on other projects I don’t see why we don’t make it uniform,” said council member Margaret-Abe-Koga at the Oct. 7 meeting, alluding to the council’s approval a year ago of a prevailing wage requirement for affordable housing projects. “We’ve talked about the high cost of living, (and) we have talked about prevailing wage and costs of it.” Member Jac Siegel motioned for the council to approve the prevailing wage requirement because “it’s a state law.” City staff said the costs of potentially higher wages were unknown, and could mean a financial impact anywhere from $0 up to $760,000 for 56 such contracts during the 201314 fiscal year, or a 15 percent increase at most. Council allocated $50,000 towards administrative costs of implementing the new requirement, just in case it’s needed. A union official reminded the council of major cost overruns and delays on the Mitchell Park library in Palo Alto because of a non-union contractor’s work. Member John Inks was the only opponent of the measure, saying the state legislation was “payback to unions who are major source of contributions” to state legislators. Email Daniel DeBolt at ddebolt@mv-voice.com Attend the first small business conference of its kind. Connect with other entrepreneurs and learn about new ways to run the business you love. Get inspired by guest speakers, including Martha Stewart, Earvin “Magic” Johnson, Arianna Huffington, Bill Rancic and Marc Andreessen. TAKE YOUR BUSINESS TO THE NEXT LEVEL { OCTOBER 21–23, 2014 San Jose Convention Center • Learn from experts on hiring, marketing, finance and running your business in the cloud • Participate in hands-on workshops led by Facebook, Google and Yelp • Grow your network by meeting other entrepreneurs and small business owners Register now at QuickBooksConnect.com October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 9 t c e l ee R LocalNews for El Camino Healthcare District I have been honored to serve our community for many years on the El Camino Healthcare District Board of Directors. My priorities are to: • Ensure local control and the long-term viability of El Camino Hospital • Continue to improve quality of care and the patient experience, while reducing the cost of care • Lead El Camino Hospital through the ACA transition from a focus on acute care to a focus on continuum of care I respectfully ask for your vote this November. Dave Reeder Paid for by Reeder for El Camino Healthcare District 2014 FPPC #1369813 COURTESY OF SILICON VALLEY AFRICAN FILM FESTIVAL “Horizon Beautiful” is one of the feature-length movies showing at the Silicon Valley African Film Festival. Silicon Valley African Film fest opens next week Mountain View’s Community School of Music and Arts plays host to over 25 films from Africa next weekend when the Silicon Valley African Film Festival opens its fifth year. The festival runs Oct. 17 to 19, and embraces many countries and cultures, from Ethiopia and Eritrea to Nigeria and Ghana. On Friday evening, Oct. 17, catch the rousing opening ceremony complete with dancing, drumming and a parade of flags before settling in for the opening night feature film, “The Mice Room,” which centers on life in the Egyptian city of Alexandria. Also on VOTE FOR • Currently serving as Environmental Planning Commissioner • 27 years at Hewlett-Packard , extensive international experience; then owned Consulting Business • Graduate, Leadership Mountain View; LMV Advisory Committee Chair • YMCA Advisory Board Member and past El Camino Branch Board Member • El Camino Hospital Foundation’s H2H Grants Committee, Co-Lead • Information Systems Management degree from USF • Distinguished Service Award , YMCA the schedule are a number of animated films, shorts. But the festival isn’t all movies; SVAFF also features live performances, post-screening Q&A sessions with filmmakers, discussion forums and an African marketplace with crafts and food for sale. Opening night attendance is $15. Day passes for Saturday and Sunday range from $20-25; a twoday pass is $30-35. For tickets and a complete festival schedule, go to svaff.org or call 415-774-6787. CSMA is located at 230 San Antonio Circle in Mountain View. — Elizabeth Schwyzer (1'256(0(176 Having raised a family in Mountain View for over 45 years, I have seen the community change in many ways. Mountain View is a great city that serves as a role model in innovative thinking and management and I want to ensure we maintain that leadership role. My top priorities are: 1. Work to achieve attainable housing and balanced growth 2. Expand infrastructure to support safe bicycle and pedestrian modes of transportation 3. Attain water conservation 4. Encourage civic engagement for all residents Anna Eshoo, U.S. Congresswoman Margaret Abe-Koga, Mountain View Councilmember Jerry Hill, California State Senator Rich Gordon, California State Assembly Matt Pear, Former Mountain View Mayor Art Takahara, Former Mountain View Mayor Evan Low, Campbell City Councilmember Liz Kniss, Palo Alto Vice-Mayor Sidney Espinosa, Former Palo Alto Mayor Santa Clara County Democratic Party Sierra Club Mountain View Professional Firefighters South Bay Labor Council, COPE Silicon Valley Asia Pacific American Democratic Club California Apartment Association, Tri-County Division Bob Burns, Former Mountain View Fire Chief Aila Malik, Chief Strategic Officer, Fresh Lifelines for Youth (FLY) Gay Krause, Chairperson Mtn. View/Los Altos/Los Altos Hills Challenge Team Gianluca & Chiara Pecora, Mtn. View Residents Peggy Franczyk, Mountain View Resident Jean Yeh, Former President, American Cancer Society, CA Vote #7 on November 4th for Community, Commitment, Capriles! Paid for and authorized by Margaret Capriles for City Council 2014 (FPPC ID#1345372) 10 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 LocalNews SOARING ANGELS Continued from page 1 Air Force Pararescuemen, also known as “PJs,” all participated in unscripted, war-like scenarios. Both the Wing’s MC-130P Combat Shadow and HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters were used in the training missions. Second Lt. Ian Freeman, a copilot on the MC-130P plane, said that the experience tested out the servicemen’s capabilities in realworld types of situations they may face when deployed. “This exercise in particular lets us hone our skills as a composite unit, which is not something we get to do every day,” he said. “It’s great to be able to practice that sort of operations mode.” Soaring Angel brought together both reservists and active duty troops. “In an exercise like this we get to bring all the different components of our wing together to do Intro Special “10 Days for $20!” Fall Schedule Time 6 AM Mon Tues Wed Thu X X X X Fri 8 AM 8:15 AM X 10 AM X X X X their job as they would be if they would be deployed together,” said Senior Master Sgt. Sean Moore. “It takes up the level of intensity quite a bit, everybody gets a chance to practice and get effective in what they do.” Email Veronica Weber at vweber@paweekly.com Sun X X X X X 12 PM A Pave Hawk helicopter returns to Moffett Field during a training exercise meant to simulate real world deployments. Sat 8:15 4pm PM X X X X 4:30 PM X X X X X X 6:30 PM X X X X 8:15 PM X X X X X X X X X X 1910 W. El Camino Real Ste E, Mountain View • 650.967.2968 E: info@bikramyogamountainview.com http://www.bikramyogamountainview.com Air crew members rush to a helicopter as it lands at Moffett Field on Saturday. The four-day training exercise tested search-and-rescue skills. Teaching Piano to Generations of Children and Adults We Offer 4 Programs: Habits: Beginning Players: Intermediate Mastery: Competition and Performance Adults: Private lessons, pay as you go Call us today to schedule an orientation! 650. 292.0573 or info@peerymusic.com 221 Bryant Avenue, Mountain View www.peerymusic.com October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 11 An Optimized Life Thursday, October 23, 2014 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. Ken DeLeon is Silicon Valley’s top Realtor and consistently ranks in the top of our nation. Additionally, Ken is a motivational speaker who has given keynote speeches to thousands while sharing the stage with Tony Robbins and others. At this seminar, Ken will share three tragedies that nearly took his life, and the many invaluable lessons he learned during his recoveries. Whether beating cancer, recovering from a horrific accident that made national news, or learning powerful lessons from his sister’s suicide, Ken has used tragedy as a springboard to greater wisdom and self-confidence, creating the life he wants to live. Ken does not fear death, only mediocrity. He looks forward to sharing his inspiration and drive with the seminar audience. Ken is amazingly thankful for all that Silicon Valley has given him. In addition to donating over $100,000 to local schools this year, Ken hopes this seminar, like his talks at local schools, will give back to the community he loves so much. Please come to learn more about how Ken accomplishes his goals and achieves an exceptional life. Palo Alto Hills Golf & Country Club Palo Alto Hills Golf & Country Club, Grand Ballroom 3000 Alexis Drive, Palo Alto To RSVP, please contact Mary Ellen Wetlesen at 650.543.8514 6 5 0 . 4 8 8 . 7 3 2 5 | i n f o @ d e l e o n r e a l t y. c o m | w w w. d e l e o n r e a l t y. c o m | C a l B R E # 0 1 9 0 3 2 2 4 12 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 DELEON REALTY Call DeLeon Realty for more information on listing your home with us! We offer staging, property inspection, pest inspection, and more. Staging includes design, installation, 1 month of furniture rental, and removal. 6 5 0 . 4 8 8 . 7 3 2 5 | w w w. d e l e o n r e a l t y. c o m | C a l B R E # 0 1 9 0 3 2 2 4 October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 13 VoterGuide Measure N school bond LOS ALTOS SCHOOL DISTRICT SEEKS $150 MILLION TO HANDLE ENROLLMENT GROWTH Kevin Forestieri T he Los Altos School District is asking voters to approve a $150 million bond that would help to fund a new school site and additional school facilities to deal with growing enrollment in the district, particularly in the area north of El Camino Real. The bond would cost district taxpayers a maximum of $30 per $100,000 of assessed value. Opponents say the district’s plans are too vague, and won’t spell out what the money will be used for. Others think the school has plenty of room to expand enrollment at existing school sites. Last year, the district Superintendent’s Enrollment Growth Task Force found that enrollment is the highest it’s been in 40 years. The key difference is that in 1970, the district had 12 schools to house the over 5000 students in the district, whereas now the district only has nine. The task force recommended the district pursue two school sites — one to house Bullis Charter School and one for Los Altos School District students. The recommendation went on to say that it is “difficult to imagine any solution for garnering school sites (and) facilities without some level of taxpayer funding.” VOTER ★ GU DE ★ 14 ★2 0 Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 4. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. To find your polling place, go to sccgov. org and click on the Registrar of Voters link. Election results for local races will be available online after the polls close at mv-voice.com. Since the report, student enrollment has increased faster than expected. This year’s enrollment is at 5,380, which is more than 100 students above projections made in May. Schools are quickly approaching or exceeding “target” enrollment at school sites across the district, according to Randy Kenyon, assistant superintendent of business services. Right now the district has more than 1,000 students on the Egan Junior High School campus, and more than 800 at the Blach Intermediate School campus. Kenyon said said Santa Rita Elementary is also quickly approaching 600 students, and will likely get even more crowded if more housing is added to the area north of El Camino Real. The result, he said, is that both campuses are crowd- ed and traffic is problematic. The district has since established a 28-person Facilities Master Plan Committee to identify potential projects for the Measure N funds, and will provide the school board with recommendations for how to prioritize those projects. Kenyon said the committee understands and agrees that the No. 1 priority is dealing with enrollment growth through a new school site. Following that are other improvements on existing campuses, which the committee has since started to prioritize. The committee includes district parents and residents from Mountain View, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills, as well as representatives from Campaign for a Balanced Mountain View and the Greater San Antonio Community Association. The school board’s “planning direction” to the committee states that the preferred option is to build one new school at a new site and modify existing schools. Though the enrollment growth task force last year recommended two new schools, the school board has since determined that acquiring two new sites is too “cost prohibitive,” Kenyon said. According to the “Yes on N” website, supporters of Measure N include the Bullis Charter School Board of Trustees, the Los Altos Education Foundation and eight of the district’s Parent Teacher Associations. Individual supporters include Mountain View Mayor Chris Clark, as well as the mayors of Los Altos and Los Altos Hills. Opponents of the bond include Los Altos School District resident David Roode, Los Altos Hills parent Robert Fagen and Mountain View City Council member John Inks. The ballot argument against Measure N states that Measure N is too vague, and needs to have detailed, site specific plans for how to spend the money. It goes on to say the Los Altos School District already has over 110 acres of space, and could accommodate enrollment growth at existing sites. In an op-ed to the Sept. 26 issue of the Voice, Roode said it’s not clear the district is willing to focus as much of the $150 million as possible on enrollment growth. He said the list of capital improvements proposed so far, which totals $350 million, are “heavy with those not increasing capacity,” and that the district may limit spending on the new school site for improvements at current schools. The ballot argument against Measure N states that the district doesn’t need to acquire more land for a new school when it could expand existing school sites and use them more efficiently. District schools are “50 percent under-utilized on a student-to-acreage metric” compared with other school districts, according to the ballot argument. Roode said that the Egan and Covington campuses, the latter of which currently houses the school district office, could potentially house a second school because of the size of the sites. Mountain View City Council member John Inks co-signed the argument against Measure N due to worries that the school district may try to use eminent domain to seize land for a school site. In an email, Inks said the bond measure does not specifically rule out eminent domain, which has caused some concern. He said attorneys for the Pear Family Trust wrote to the school district and confirmed that their properties were not available for sale, and that they were strongly opposed to acquisition by eminent domain. Kenyon said the board has no plans to use eminent domain, and believes members would be reluctant to exercise the option as anything but a last resort. Other opponents include the president of the Silicon Valley Taxpayers Association, Mark Hinkle, who said he opposes the property tax on district residents. He said the $30 per $100,000 of assessed value adds up, and on top of other property taxes poses a burden to property owners in the area. Decisions depend on new school location and size A new school site north of El Camino Real would be the preferred option for the Los Altos School District, but it might also be the most challenging area to See MEASURE N, page 18 Measure A raises City Council pay to $1,000 a month By Daniel DeBolt A fter an effort in 2006 to raise City Council pay to $1,500 a month failed by 700 votes, Measure A is another effort to boost pay — this time to a more modest $1,000 a month — in what’s been called an effort to make being a council member more attractive to working people. In discussions over the last year, council members have complained that working people could never serve on the council, given the $600 a month members are paid now; that amount, they say, is less than minimum wage. It amounts to $5 an hour, given the 30 hours a week council members say they work, on average. Raising it to $1,000 a month would equal $8.30 an hour, still below minimum wage in California (now $9 an hour). There has been no organized group of opponents to the pay raise. Mountain View attorney 14 VOTER ★ GU DE ★ 14 ★2 0 and longtime resident Gary Wesley wrote the ballot argument against Measure A. He notes that if there’s a shortage of candidates due to low pay, it’s not evident in this year’s council race, with nine candidates running for three open seats. Wesley says the measure fails to note the other benefits of being a council member, which include health benefits, expense accounts, travel reimbursements, and stipends for attending regional board meetings. He adds that the benefits also include the ability to restrict housing supply and approve office space. That benefits all of the current members because they own homes that have presumably gone up in value because of the city’s housing Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 shortage, he says. “In approving more and more office space in Mountain View, the council has contributed to the increased demand for housing in the city. Partly as a result, the price of the houses in Mountain View has skyrocketed. All seven members of the current City Council are homeowners. They are benefiting handsomely,” Wesley wrote in a recent op-ed. In this year’s race, there are three renters in the running for a council seat who also work full-time jobs: Ellen Kamei, Mercedes Salem and Jim Neal. The measure would allow more such candidates to serve, proponents say. The current council is made up of two retirees, two business owners, a business executive and two who have been supported by their spouses. “Mountain View deserves a diverse, well-balanced council that is accessible to all residents, not just candidates who can afford to serve,” says the rebuttal to the argument against Measure A, signed by Joan McDonald, resident and community volunteer, Mayor Chris Clark and Oscar Garcia, CEO of the Mountain View Chamber of Commerce. The measure would also automatically raise council pay every year based on a formula reflecting inflation, not to exceed 5 percent a year. It also allows council members to be absent from regular meetings with the consent of the council for official duties without being docked $25, the current practice. Council pay was last raised by voters in 1984, to $500 a month, which would equal $1,137 today if adjusted for inflation. It was later raised automatically to $600 a month when the city’s population hit 75,000 people — the maximum automatic increase allowed for Mountain View under state law for charter cities, based on population growth. The measure does not change the city’s charter amendment, which requires council pay raises to be approved by voters. A survey of City Council salaries in nearby cities found that the cities of Palo Alto and Campbell pay council members similarly to Mountain View. Paying half of Mountain View’s salary or less are Los Altos, Morgan Hill, Saratoga, Los Gatos and Los Altos Hills. Paying council members more per month are Cupertino ($730), Sunnyvale ($1,982), Santa Clara ($812), Milpitas ($861), Gilroy ($729) and San Jose ($10,583). Most also pay mayors a bonus — Mountain View pays an additional $100 a month to its mayor — along with offering medical and dental benefits for all members, as does Mountain View. Email Daniel DeBolt at ddebolt@mv-voice.com Continued from page 5 while Unangst paid Google $228 for online ads. Matichak and Rosenberg each spent over $300 more than the others on neighborhood association newsletter ads, each spending $921 for ads in the newsletters of the Old Mountain View Neighborhood Association, the Cuesta Park Neighborhood Association and Monta Loma Neighborhood Association. Siegel was the only one to not report any expenses for digital or print ads, and reported spending $463 on 500 brochures printed in Spanish. Few paid political consultants. Rosenberg paid $275 to Fair Oaks-based Tab Communications and Unangst gave Chris Nicholson of Los Altos $3,000. Salem was the only candidate to expense “volunteer snacks” — worth about $125 — including coffee, ice cream and $87 in groceries. Showalter reported the priciest fund-raising event, spending $662 at the Tied House. Lisa Matichak Total raised: $17,207 Spent: $9,695 Notable contributions: $5,000 loan from herself; $5,000 from Cupertino resident and engineer Greg Schaffer; $500 from the California Apartment Association; $500 from Real Estate Investor Todd Spieker; $250 from the Mountain View Housing Council; $1,499 from resident Paul Edwards; $400 from the Cuesta Park Neighborhood Association; $100 to $125 each from Konrad Sosnow, Robert Cox, Bob Weaver and council member Jac Siegel and his wife Sharon. Lenny Siegel Total raised: $8,040 Spent: $4,776 Notable contributions: $500 from the League of Conservation Voters in Palo Alto; $100 from former council member Greg Perry; $300 each from Michael Fischetti and his wife Marilyn Winkleby; $100 from transit planner Cliff Chambers; $150 from former Mountain View School District board member Betsy Collard; $100 from Google engineer Aldona Marjorek; $100 from community organizer Sylvia Villesenor; $890 in unitemized contributions of less than $100 each. Jim Neal Total raised:$930 Spent: $939 Notable contributions: $99 in unitemized contributions and a $831 personal loan from himself. Ken Rosenberg Total raised:$15,054 Spent: $8,752 Notable contributions: $2,500 loan from himself; $500 from real estate investor Todd Spieker; $250 from Mountain View Housing Council; $250 from Sports Page bar manager Thomas Graham; $100 from Google program manager Deb Henigson; $150 from former Mountain View School District board member Betsy Collard. Margaret Capriles Total raised:$16,952 Spent: $10,614 Notable contributions: $2,000 from the Mountain View Firefighters Association; $100 from Milk Pail market owner Steve Rasmussen; $500 from real estate investor Todd Spieker; $500 from the California Apartment Association; $500 from the Mountain View Housing Council; $100 from Rich Gordon for state Assembly; $125 from City Council member Margaret Abe-Koga; $200 from former mayor Art Takahara; $2,000 worth of food from Larry Chu, owner of Chef Chu’s restaurant in Los Altos. Ellen Kamei Total raised:$21,288 Spent: $3,895 Notable contributions: $1,000 from Democratic Activists for Women Now (DAWN); $200 from San Jose City Council member Ash Kalra, $250 from Santa Clara and San Benito Counties Building and Construction Trades Council PAC; $250 from Campbell City Council member Evan Low; $500 from the California Apartment Association; $500 from real estate investor Todd Spieker; $250 from Mountain View Housing Coun- cil PAC; $150 from Khahn Russo, Cisco systems; $200 from PG&E. Pat Showalter Total raised:$15,620 Spent: $15,583 Notable contributions: $4,000 loan from herself; $500 from Democratic Activists for Women Now (DAWN); $500 from the California Apartment Association; $500 from Santa Clara Valley Water District COO Norma Camacho; $250 from Sports Page bar manager Thomas Graham; $250 from International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers Local 21; $200 from Rod Diridon Sr.; $250 from the Mountain View Housing Council; $200 from PG&E; $200 from the CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group Carl Guardino. Greg Unangst Total raised:$21,000 Spent: $14,074 Notable contributions: $21,000 loan from himself. Mercedes Salem Total raised:$32,829 Spent: $8,351 Notable contributions: $8,000 loan from herself; $1,500 from Jamshid Salem; $1,200 Thomas and Theodore Biagini of Biagini properties; $1,200 from Azadeh Hariri of A&F properties; $1,200 from founder of Pars Equality Center Bita Daryabari; $1,200 from founder of Columbus Nova Technology Partners Mohsen Moazami; $600 from Michelina Gauthier, Discovery Channel senior vice president; $1,500 from Ciema Salem, senior counsel at Mattel, Inc. V Murphy Wallbeds Wallbeds “n” More Get your guest room ready for the holidays! Save 300 OFF $ a wallbed exp. 11/30/14 Our Wallbeds Are: Price Match Guarantee! Stylish High Quality Comfortable ,?7,9;(+=0*,:<7,90698<(30;@(5+:,9=0*, 46<5;(05=0,> 650.477.5532 (Call for appointment) www.wallbedsnmore.com Elect Ken Rosenberg for Mountain View City Council. Endorsed by Mountain View organizations and leaders. Community Leaders Joe Simitian, Santa Clara County Supervisor The Palo Alto Art Center, Bay Area Glass Institute, and the Palo Alto Art Center Foundation present: T H E GREAT GLASS PUMPKIN PATCH® Pumpkins by Treg Silkwood, Photo by Keay Edwards. FINANCE STYLE MEETS FUNCTIONALITY VoterGuide OCTOBER 7 – 12, 2014 EXHIBITION ONLY October 7 and 8, 10 a.m. – 7 p.m. October 9 and 10, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. no sales during exhibition PUMPKIN SALES Saturday & Sunday, October 11 and 12 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. EVENT LOCATION Palo Alto Art Center 1313 Newell Road Palo Alto, CA 94303 650.329.2366 Free admission Children always welcome For information call 650.329.2366 or visit www.greatglasspumpkinpatch.com 0DULD0DUURTXLQ, Executive Director, Day Worker Center of MV -H5RVHQSanta Clara County District Attorney 5DFKHO*URVVPDQ, Former Chair, Environmental Planning Commission 5RQLW%U\DQW, Former Mayor and current Council member, City of Mountain View %UXFH.DUQH\, Former Chair, MV Environmental Sustainability Task Force 7RP0HDQV, Former Mayor and Council member, City of Mountain View +HOHQ:ROWHU, Chair, MV Parks and Recreation Commission 0DWW3HDU, Former Mayor and Council member, City of Mountain View Aila Malik, Commissioner, MV Human Relations Commission (OQD7\PHV, Member, MV Senior Advisory Committee *UHJ3HUU\, Former Vice Mayor, City of Mountain View 2VFDU*DUFLD, CEO, Chamber of Commerce MV 'U%DUU\*URYHV, Superintendent, Mountain View Los Altos High School District &\QWKLD*UHDYHV, Chair, Chamber of Commerce MV Board of Directors )LRQD:DOWHU, Former President and Trustee, Mountain View Whisman School District Organizations &KULVWRSKHU&KLDQJ, Trustee, Mountain View Whisman School District Chamber of Commerce Mountain View 3KLOLS3DOPHU, Trustee, Mountain View Whisman School District Mountain View Voters for Housing Diversity Mountain View Housing Council 6WHYH2OVRQ, Former Trustee, Mountain View Whisman School District Silicon Valley Association of REALTORS®, PAC $GGLWLRQDOHQGRUVHPHQWVDWZZZ0RXQWDLQ9LHZ.HQFRP WWW.greatglasspumpkinpatch.com Paid for by Ken Rosenberg for Mountain View City Council, FPPC#1364075 October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 15 VoterGuide EL CAMINO Continued from page 1 tino. It’s a separate entity from the hospital corporation, and receives tax dollars from district residents. The money is used to invest in the hospital, and a portion of the money goes back into the community through a community benefit program. Past election issues include opening facilities outside the district, and the results of a service U.S. POSTAL SERVICE STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION Required by 39 U.S.C. 3685 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Title of Publication: Mountain View Voice Publication Number: 2560 Date of Filing: October 1, 2014 Frequency of Issue: Weekly No. of Issues Published Annually: 52 Annual subscription price: $60/1yr Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication: 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, CA 94306-1507 8. Mailing Address of Headquarters of Publisher: Same 9. Publisher: William Johnson, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, CA 943061507; Editor: Andrea Gemmet, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, CA 94306-1507; Managing Editor: Renee Bati, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, CA 94306-1507 10. Stockholders owning 1% or more of the total amount of stock: William S. Johnson & Teresa Lobdell, Trustees, Jean and Dexter Dawes, Shirley Ely, Trustee, Franklin P. Johnson, Marion Lewenstein, Trustee, Helen Pickering, Trustee, Jeanne Ware and Catherine Spitters Keyani, all of Palo Alto, California; Margaret Haneberg of San Luis Obispo, California; Jerome I. Elkind of Portola Valley, California; Anthony Sloss of Santa Cruz, California; Derek van Bronkhorst, Mary Spitters Casey and Peter Spitters of Campbell, California; Laurence Spitters of San Jose, California, Jon van Bronkhorst of Redwood City, California; Kort van Bronkhorst of Napa, California; Nancy Eaton of Sausalito, California; John Spitters of Danville, California; Thomas Spitters of Los Altos, California; Karen Sloss of Bellingham, Washington; Christopher Spitters and Elizabeth Sloss of Seattle, Washingon. 11. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1% or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities: None. 14. Issue Date for Circulation Data Below: September 26, 2014 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation Average no. of Actual no. of copies each issue during preceding 12 months A. Total Number of Copies (Net press run) B. Paid and/or Requested Circulation 1. Paid/Requested Outside Co. Mail Subscriptions 2. Paid/Requested In County 3. Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, and Counter Sales C. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation D1. Free Distribution by Mail Outside-County D2. Free Distribution by Mail Inside-County D4. Free Distribution Outside the Mail E. Total Free Distribution F. Total Distribution G. Copies not Distributed H. Total I. Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation copies of single issue nearest to filing date 15,990 16,000 26 6,471 26 6,361 1,745 8,242 0 579 4,758 5,337 13,579 2,411 15,990 1,800 8,187 0 549 4,820 5,369 13,556 2,444 16,000 60.70% 60.39% 17. Published in MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE on October 10, 2014 18. I certify that the information furnished on this form is true and complete. Michael I. Naar, CFO, Embarcadero Media Vote For review by the Local Area Formation Commission (LAFCo) that found that the health care district lacked transparency and accountability in its role and in how it maintained independence from the hospital corporation. All five health care district board members also serve on the hospital corporation board. Past stories on the candidates can be found in the June 20 edition of the Voice for Abe-Koga, and the Aug. 1 edition for Fung and Reeder. David Reeder Age: 71 Occupation: Retired program manager, business analyst Education: MS in electrical engineering from Stanford University; BS in Electrical Engineering from Washington State University City of residence: Los Altos Website: reeder4echd.com David Reeder is a former Los Altos City Council member who has served on the health care district board for the past 16 years. He said his experience gives him a good idea of where health care was, and the direction it’s going today. His last eight years on the board, in particular, have been focused on improving the quality of care at the hospital, he said. One of the hospital’s big projects, which Reeder said he hopes to continue to work on as a district board member, is creat- ing a “continuum” of care in which the hospital takes care of patients before and after hospital admittance. He said the system is currently fragmented: The doctors who refer patients to the hospital, skilled nursing facilities and home care providers all work separately from the hospital, and he supports creating partnerships to ensure that continuum. Reeder said the health care district has always maintained transparency by operating under the Brown Act, but was criticized by LAFCo for not distinguishing between the hospital board and the health care district board. As a result of the report, he said, the health care district now has its own separate website and its own financial audits. “I would say we got glowing remarks from the LAFCo commissioners in terms of the work that we’ve done to make it more transparent,” he said. The decision to open El Camino Hospital’s Los Gatos campus was an effort by the hospital to increase patient volume, according to Reeder. He said it’s difficult for a small, independent community hospital to survive with just one campus, especially when the number of district residents remains static. Reeder said the board needed to accomplish two things when it agreed that the hospital should expand its service area: make sure taxpayer funds were not used to build the Los Gatos facilities, and provide some net benefit to community members in the district. Addressing the latter, he said the district benefits from the expansion because as volumes increase across both hospital Lisa Matichak Mountain View City Council The only candidate endorsed by all 3 outgoing Councilmembers Key Priorities Endorsements (partial list) Support our neighborhoods and enhance the quality of life for our diverse mix of residents Advocate for high-quality housing that is affordable Add parks and open space in our increasingly urban environment Maintain Mountain View as a financially strong city Margaret Abe-Koga, Ronit Bryant, and Jac Siegel Qualified to Lead 5th year on Environmental Planning Commission (EPC) (2010 to present), Chair (2013) and Vice Chair (2012) Founding President Wagon Wheel Neighborhood Assn 15-year resident (8 as renter, 7 as townhouse owner in N. Whisman) CERT certified since 2008 Master of Business Administration (MBA), UCLA Over 25 years in the high tech and IT security industries Former Mayors and Current City Councilmembers Nick Galiotto, Laura Macias, and Matt Pear Former Mayors and City Councilmembers California Apartment Association Tri-County Division M.V. Police Officers Association M.V. Professional Firefighters Chamber of Commerce M.V. South Bay Labor Council Steve Rasmussen (Milk Pail) Laura Brown, Robert Chang Chris Dateo, Thida Cornes Robert Cox, Jessica Gandhi Joe Mitchner, Jamil Shaikh Bob Weaver, Helen Wolter Good For Your Neighborhood — www.LisaForCouncil.com — 16 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 Paid for by Matichak for City Council 2014 FPPC# 1366232 campuses, physicians and nurses become more proficient in their surgical and other skills, and the quality of care increases. On the community benefit program, Reeder said the executive team at the hospital does an “outstanding” job finding the right groups to fund based on the health care district’s goals, including access to care, mental health and obesity. He said the district also has a rigorous set of metrics for those who receive funding to determine how many patients they are going to serve, and what improvements they expect to get. Reeder said he believes the dual-board system, in which the health care district board members also serve on the hospital board, works well. He said if they give up representation on the hospital board, they risk losing control and responsibility in how the hospital is run. “This hospital is owned by the people the same way our parks and our libraries are owned by the people,” he said. “There has to be some control in doing that.” Margaret Abe-Koga Age: 44 Occupation: City council member, nonprofit manager Education: BA in government at Harvard University City of residence: Mountain View Website: www.mak4echd.com Margaret Abe-Koga is finishing her second City Council term; she served on the Santa Clara County Board of Education before that. While on the council she also served on the regional board of the Valley Transportation Authority, which was facing a deep budget deficit. Now, she’s ready to bring her experience in governance, accountability and budgeting to the health care district, she said. If elected to the board, AbeKoga would be the only board member from Mountain View; all current members are from either Sunnyvale or Los Altos. Improving accessibility and affordability in the district, as well as ensuring good governance, would be among her goals if elected, she said. She serves on LAFCo, which took part in the service review that found the district lacked transparency and accountability to its residents, and made suggestions for improvement. She said the district has done a good job responding to the criticism so far, but that it’s still a work in progress that she would like to VoterGuide work on first-hand. “I would really like to be a part of that and be able to ensure the right governance structure, being very mindful that this is taxpayer dollars and they need to be used wisely and correctly,” she said. The LAFCo audit and subsequent changes to the district are reasons she decided to run for a spot on the board, she said, adding that she wants to explore the “best governance structure” for the district and the hospital corporation. Abe-Koga said she understands that the health care industry is competitive and El Camino Hospital needs to keep up to be solvent, adding that expanding to Los Gatos to net more customers can be justified. That being said, she believes the expansion of the hospital should always have some benefit to district residents. “I’ve always said in our discussions with the hospital administration (that) we have to remember what the roots of the hospital (are) and that’s back to the district,” Abe-Koga said. “There has to be a tie to benefiting our district residents.” She said it remains to be seen whether the Los Gatos campus has actually benefited people in the district, and that the health care district needs to provide more charity care and community benefits to the people they serve. Abe-Koga said that both the hospital corporation and the health care district need to provide more resources to the community through the community benefit program, and that both organizations are on the right track since the LAFCo report, with each pouring millions of dollars into the program each year. She said she would advocate an increase in the total amount of money granted through the program, including more money towards school nurse programs and the RotaCare Free Clinic. On the dual-board structure, Abe-Koga said she would be open to look at best practices on whether to continue having all five district board members on the hospital board. She said people seem to appreciate the larger hospital board, which includes people with areas of expertise, and that she would be willing to look at having just two or three district board members serve on the hospital board. She would also be willing to look at going the other way — reverting to a model where only health care district board members serve on the hospital corporation board. e e r F Composting Classes Mountain View Community Center Auditorium 201 S. Rengstorff Ave. Saturday morning class 10AM – Noon October 18 Please pre-register for classes by going to www.ReduceWaste.org/Classes or call 408-918-4640 Compost Bins for sale – $55.00 Learn about: • Turning leaves, grass & kitchen scraps into rich compost • What can go into your pile • How to tell when the compost is ready • How to use compost • Types of compost bins, including worm bin bins Peter Fung Age: 66 Occupation: Neurologist Education: MD from the University of Hong Kong; MS in Neurophysiology from the University of Michigan City of residence: Los Altos Hills Website: www.votepeterfung. com Peter Fung is the director of the stroke program at El Camino Hospital, and has been a practicing neurologist in the South Bay for over 35 years. He is also a founding member of the Chinese Health Initiative, a program at El Camino Hospital that seeks to reduce the health disparities in the Bay Area’s growing Chinese population. Fung said his long-term career in health care has helped him understand health care delivery, and how everyday medical issues can affect people. His goals include promoting good health across the district through improved access to care, addressing mental health issues, and curbing the rate of obesity and lack of physical activity. He said the district has tried to make some distinction between the health care district board and the hospital board, but that it hasn’t been enough. He said the district could to more to separate the financial accounting and audits as well as the websites for both boards. “There are a lot of logistics that may be difficult to further distinguish it, but I think they should be done,” Fung said. Though the hospital operates facilities well outside of district boundaries, Fung said he thinks it does come back to benefit district residents, while at the same time allowing El Camino Hospital to stay competitive. He said the hospital is running out of space at its Mountain View campus, and expanding the hospital infrastructure for services into other areas will improve the quality of care. Fung said the Los Gatos campus, in particular, has become a “center of excellence,” and is highly specialized in men’s health as well as orthopedic and spine care. On the community benefit program, Fung said he was disappointed to hear the amount of grant money this year had dropped to $6.3 million. He said there is a growing disparity in the availability of health care for dis- trict residents, and grant money needs to increase each year to accommodate their needs. As a board member, Fung said he would look to improve the way the health care district decides how to allocate money through the program. He the district needs to assess the needs of residents within the district boundaries, rather than using broad data that accounts for people as far as Milpitas and east San Jose, and should include input that represents the ethnic makeup of the area. He said the hospital should also conduct a “health needs assessment” every year or every other year, instead of once every three years, to better address the needs of the community. Fung said that having all five health care district board members switch their role to hospital board members, sometimes in the same night, can be very confusing and hard for the public to keep track of, making transparency and accountability difficult. He said there should be a mechanism in place ensuring that members of each board remain distinct during meetings. He said it was a good thing to introduce health care professionals to the hospital board because it brings in representatives from practitioners in the field. V Greg Coladonato R E D U C E R E U S E R E C Y C L E FOR SCHOOL BOARD New Ideas, New Energy, New Leadership • Update our 5 year old facilities plan to current reality, and develop district-wide priorities, before spending remaining $148 million of Measure G money • Establish new programs to address the fact that 30% of our students perform below grade level in math and English • Develop new teacher hiring, training, evaluation, and compensation policies that are worthy of a school district in Silicon Valley in the 21st century Current Chair of the MVWSD Measure G Citizen’s Bond Oversight Committee Current Chair of the City of Mountain View Human Relations Commission MBA in Analytical Methods for Management from Wharton School at U. Penn Parent of 2 current district students, in kindergarten and 2nd grade Paid for by Greg Coladonato for School Board 2014, FPPC #1370259. Endorsed by the Mountain View Voice October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 17 VoterGuide MEASURE N trict calling for both parties to collaborate on ways to build a school site in the San Antonio area. Clark responded with a letter in response, dated Sept. 8, and said staff from both agencies have talked “several times” about properties in the area and the precise plan process. He said he believes the city is open to contributing developer open space fees for a field or other open space areas associated with a school. Superintendent Jeff Baier said the city of Mountain View has also acknowledged the prospect of a school in the area in the draft of the San Antonio Precise Plan. As it stands, the district would likely have to acquire expensive private property in the area to build a school in the area. Depending on the number of acres, a lion’s share of the bond measure money could be committed to land acquisition. Continued from page 14 we stand for JYLH[P]L PUKLWLUKLU[ JYP[PJHS[OPURPUN find a spot for a new school. Normally the city, in this case the city of Mountain View, would have a park or some other city land they could dedicate to a new school. But that’s not the case in the San Antonio area. Lenny Siegel, a council candidate and the leader of the Campaign for a Balanced Mountain View, sent a letter to the Mountain View City Council and the Los Altos School Dis- Join today: SupportLocalJournalism.org Do You? Join Us Open House Sunday, October 19 9 am - 1 pm Information Night Tuesday, November 18 7 pm And number of acres matters in the context of what the district does next. If the acreage of the school is anywhere from 8 to 10 acres, the district could use the school as a large neighborhood school, or it could house Bullis Charter School and free up space at the district’s junior high schools. If the acquired site is only 6 acres, it would likely be too small for the charter school and would likely be used as a magnet or “choice” school. The district is also considering shifting to a K-5 model for elementary schools, with sixthgrade students attending the two junior high schools. Kenyon said if Bullis Charter School were to be relocated to a new site, the extra space at middle school could accommodate sixth grade students and decrease enrollment at all the elementary schools. Email Kevin Forestieri at kforestieri@mv-voice.com www.demartiniorchard.com 66 N. San Antonio Rd., Los Altos Open Daily 8am-7pm Prices Effective 10/08 thru 10/14 CALIF. GROWN SEEDLESS GRAPES 1 $ 99 FINEST QUALITY RED OR GREEN SWEET LB. CRISP ORGANIC LOCAL 650-948-0881 Farm Fresh and Always the Best PUMPKINS A N LOCALLY GROWN GIZDICH RANCH APPLES G RE IN OW ALL SHAPES AND SIZES AND COLORS GNALAATURALLY GOURDS, INDIAN CORN, BABY BOO'S, MINI'S, LOTS OF EDIBLE ONES ALSO ORGANIC LOCAL DELICIOUS PINOVA BRAEBURN PIPPIN 23 LBS FOR ROWN $ 00 ORGANIC LOCAL C AULIFLOWER RED PEPPERS LEAF LETTUCE J UMBO 1 2 $300 1 ZUCCHINI GREEN KALE T ¢ $149 $399 99 Your Everyday Farmers Market $ 99 SWEET $ 99 R OMAINE BUN 9 SIZE RED, GREEN AND FOR L B . OR BUTTER SNOW WHITE E A . CRISP ORGANIC LOCAL ORGANIC LOCAL NATURAL LOCAL HEIRLOOM CHERRY VERY TASTY ^^^ZMOZJVT 18 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 OMATOES B SK . EXTRA FANCY LACINATO RED OR L B . GREEN B UN . Online at www.DeMartiniOrchard.com LocalNews QCOMMUNITYBRIEFS SUPERVISORS OK WINTER SHELTER PLAN On Oct. 7, the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors approved a plan that will provide up to $1.1 million in funding to make sure the homeless in the North County area have a warm, safe place to spend nights this winter. Due to the closing of the Sunnyvale Armory Shelter last March, the North County area lost more than 125 shelter spots during the four month cold weather season. In order to find a replacement for the Armory shelter, which was replaced by an affordable housing development, the County spent the past several months working with city and nonprofit partners. However, County staff found they would be unable to find a facility by Thanksgiving. “Right now, time is our enemy. Last year, we lost four lives in a week during an unexpected cold spell. That can’t be allowed to happen again,” said Santa Clara County Supervisor Joe Simitian. The motion made by Simitian on Oct. 7 secured a plan to serve the homeless this winter. This plan includes a series of agreements with four non-profits including Downtown Streets Team, HomeFirst, InnVision Shelter Network and Project WeHope. The Santa Clara County will provide a motel voucher program for families with children and single adults, expanded shelter services at Project WeHope in East Palo Alto, Hotel de Zink in Palo Alto, Commercial Street Inn and the Boccardo Reception Center in San Jose. Simitian’s motion also directs County staff to continue the search for a permanent shelter or shelters serving the North County and West Valley areas, and the Board also included a provision for expanding other homelessness reduction and prevention programs. “In a region where affordable housing is scarce, the Board’s approval of this plan helps to provide additional options for those among us who are in crisis,” said Director of Real Estate and Facilities for InnVision Shelter Network, Mila Zelkha. For more information, contact Christine Stavem at Christine. Stavem@bos.sccgov.org or Paige Sanks at Paige.Sanks@bos.sccgov.org COMPUTER HISTORY MUSEUM HOSTS STEVE CASE The Computer History Museum is taking its acclaimed speaker series, Revolutionaries, on the road, and the first stop will be National Public Radio’s corporate headquarters and digital news center in Washington, D.C. The Mountain View-based Computer History Museum holds the largest international collection of computing artifacts in the world. Revolutionaries series participants include Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, journalist Steven Levy, Dreamworks cofounder Jeffrey Katzenberg, and most recently, entrepreneur, investor and philanthropist Steve Case. Revolutionaries enables listeners to learn about the challenges some of the most renowned innovators encountered on their way to success. On Oct. 3, Computer History Museum CEO John Hollar led a conversation with Case about his accomplishments and work for America Online. In order to fund the speaker series the Computer History Museum receives support from Intel and KQED. “Taking the series on the road a few times a year gives us the opportunity to expand the influence and awareness of the museum and Revolutionaries,” said Revolutionaries series creator Carol Stiglic. For more information go to computerhistory.org/events. —Madeleine Gerson Like us on www.facebook.com/ MountainViewVoice October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 19 LocalNews PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF MOUNTAIN VIEW WHISMAN SCHOOL DISTRICT MEASURE G BOND PROJECTS RFQ NO. 2 ALL qualifications must be submitted in a sealed envelope no later than 2:00 PM local time on Thursday, October 30, 2014. Mountain View Whisman School District invites responses from qualified firms, partnerships, corporations, associations, persons, or professional organizations to enter into agreements with the District to construct improvements to the Mountain View Whisman School District Measure G Bond Projects (“Projects”) pursuant to the lease/leaseback structure (Education Code section 17406, et seq.) and to leaseback a “turn key” Project(s) to the District. Interested firms or persons are invited to submit one (1) original and five (5) copies of your completed Qualifications package to: RFQ #2 for Construction of MVWSD Measure G Bond Projects Mountain View Whisman School District Attn: Terese McNamee, CBO 750-A San Pierre Way Mountain View, CA 94043 If you have questions regarding this RFQ, please submit in writing via fax on or before October 24, 2014 at 2:00 PM to Greystone West Company, attention Todd Lee, 707-996-8390. A complete RFQ may be obtained from the District’s Construction Manager: Greystone West Co., at 707-933-0624 or downloaded from http://www.mvwsd.org/measure-g-rfps-rfqs A Mandatory Pre-Proposal meeting for these projects will be held on Thursday, October 23, 2014. Please meet at: MVWSD District Office, 750A San Pierre Way, Mountain View, CA 94043. Time of Meeting: 2:30 PM The District may, at its discretion, interview some of the respondents. The District intends to schedule these interviews between November 10 and 14, 2014. This RFQ is neither a formal request for bids, nor an offer by the District to contract with any party responding to this RFQ. The District reserves the right to reject any and all responses. The District also reserves the right to amend this RFQ as necessary. All materials submitted to the District in response to this RFQ shall remain property of the District. NATALIA NAZAROVA. POLKA, ANYONE? It took a pair of true Germans to show everyone how it’s done at the Oktoberfest celebration in downtown Mountain View this weekend. Doris Szimkowiak of Koblenz, Germany, was visiting her daughter in Mountain View when Herbert Kalbskopf, also from Germany, invited her to dance on on Oct. 4. Dental Anxiety is a Thing of the Past No more needles, no more drills NO ADDITIONAL COST! Introducing the Solea Dental Laser Call for New Patient Specials! 95% OF OUR PATIENTS ARE TREATED WITH NO ANESTHESIA 98% OF THOSE PATIENTS SAY THEY FEEL APPROVED FOR PEDIATRIC PATIENTS NO PAIN Call today or visit our website to schedule an appointment: 105 South Drive, Suite 200 Mountain View www.drmcevoy.com (650) 969-2600 Patrick F. McEvoy, DDS, is Mountain View’s premier practitioner of general and implant dentistry. When you need a trusted, reliable dentist that cares about your needs and can create a beautiful smile that you will love, Dr. McEvoy is the only name you’ll ever need to know. He has built a solid reputation in his field as a caring, knowledgeable dentist that can enhance the beauty of any smile. Dr. McEvoy has attained the highest level of training for implant dentistry and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Implant Dentistry and a Diplomate of the American Board of Implant Dentistry / Oral Implantology. Like us on Facebook COSMETIC DENTISTRY • ONE TREATMENT LASER WHITENING • NO-PREP VENEERS • CEREC (ONE VISIT CROWNS) • GENERAL DENTISTRY • SEDATION DENTISTRY 20 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 LocalNews SAN ANTONIO Continued from page 1 afford to add twice as many jobs as employed residents in the San Antonio area,” he said after the meeting. Council members also decided Tuesday to remove from the precise plan developer Merlone Geier’s large second phase of its project for the shopping center. During the meeting, Planning Director Randy Tsuda said he wasn’t sure when developer Merlone Geier would move forward with its phase two project — complete with hotel, movie theater, offices, retail shops and courtyard. Earlier this year, Merlone Geier was told by the council to remove one of the project’s two, 200,000-square-foot office buildings and replace it with housing, a direction Merlone Geier had protested at the time. Rumors that Merlone Geier was pulling out from that project fueled speculation about the council’s new interest in office development for the San Antonio plan. Council members also decided to not address priorities for community benefits in detail in the plan. Community benefits are required for developments at maximum density, which is up to eight stories high in some places. Instead, the council opted to review their community benefit priorities periodically and on a case-by-case basis as projects are proposed in the area. The draft had made affordable housing a priority, but that was removed by members. Bike and pedestrian mobility was also a priority in the draft. Council members and residents expressed concern that other possible community benefits, such as a school, a park or shared parking, would never be built unless called out in more detail in the plan. Residents and Los Altos School District parents and officials want a new school site in the plan to accommodate growing enrollment and the hundreds of children in the area who cross El Camino Real to get to school. It’s is unclear how many new news students would live in new housing, especially if it consists primarily of smaller apartments. Merlone Geier representatives have told the city that only two children live in the 330 apartments at the new Carmel at the Village development at San Antonio shopping center, said planning director Tsuda, adding that the number of students in new apartments could go up over time. Council members did not discuss calls from cyclists for a better connection through the plan area from the bike boulevard on Latham Street, but member Bryant expressed concern about the the city delaying construction of the Latham and Church street bike boulevard until 2017. She also raised the issue of having 22-foot-wide lanes for cars around the Hetch-Hetchy greenway that bisects shopping center, nearly wide enough for two car lanes. “That seems to be inviting cars to go fast — I have some concerns about that,” Bryant said, noting research showing significantly fewer accidents on relatively narrow lanes. City staff said the wide lanes would help with emergency vehicle access. The council’s discussion is expected to be the last one before the council votes to approve the final San Antonio precise plan on Dec. 2. An Environmental Planning Commission review of the plan is set for a Nov. 17 meeting. COURTESY CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW Email Daniel DeBolt at ddebolt@mv-voice.com City Council members decided Tuesday to allow 200,000 square feet of additional office space in the San Antonio precise plan area, in addition to the 400,000 square feet of offices proposed for “area two.” October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 21 Viewpoint QEDITORIAL QYOUR LETTERS QGUEST OPINIONS QEDITORIAL THE OPINION OF THE VOICE Founding Editor, Kate Wakerly Q S TA F F EDITOR Voice endorsements for local races Andrea Gemmet (223-6537) EDITORIAL Associate Editor Renee Batti (223-6528) Staff Writers Daniel DeBolt (223-6536) Kevin Forestieri (223-6535) Intern Madeleine Gerson Photographer Michelle Le (223-6530) Photo Intern Natalia Nazarova Contributors Dale Bentson, Angela Hey, Sheila Himmel, Ruth Schecter DESIGN & PRODUCTION Marketing and Creative Director Shannon Corey (223-6560) Design and Production Manager Lili Cao (223-6562) Designers Linda Atilano, Colleen Hench, Rosanna Leung, Paul Llewellyn ADVERTISING Vice President Sales and Marketing Tom Zahiralis (223-6570) Advertising Representatives Adam Carter (223-6573) Real Estate Account Executive Rosemary Lewkowitz (223-6585) Published every Friday at 450 Cambridge Avenue Palo Alto, CA 94306 (650) 964-6300 fax (650) 964-0294 Email news and photos to: editor@MV-Voice.com Email letters to: letters@MV-Voice.com News/Editorial Department (650) 964-6300 fax (650) 964-0294 Display Advertising Sales (650) 964-6300 Classified Advertising Sales (650) 964-6490 • (650) 326-8286 fax (650) 326-0155 Email Classified ads@MV-Voice.com Email Circulation circulation@MV-Voice.com The Voice is published weekly by Embarcadero Media Co. and distributed free to residences and businesses in Mountain View. If you are not currently receiving the paper, you may request free delivery by calling 964-6300. Subscriptions for $60 per year, $100 per 2 years are welcome. ©2014 by Embarcadero Media Company. All rights reserved. Member, Mountain View Chamber of Commerce QWHAT’S YOUR VIEW? All views must include a home address and contact phone number. Published letters will also appear on the web site, www.MountainViewOnline.com, and occasionally on the Town Square forum. Town Square forum Post your views on Town Square at MountainViewOnline.com Email your views to letters@MV-Voice.com. Indicate if letter is to be published. Mail to: Editor Mountain View Voice, P.O. Box 405 Mountain View, CA 94042-0405 Call the Viewpoint desk at 223-6528 22 Health care district choices Yes on Measure A V o Mountain View residents want to limit the field of people who serve on the City Council to only those who can afford to work, for the public’s benefit, 20 to 30 hours a week at far below minimum wage? To people who are retired or who have the financial means to spend fewer hours in their workplace so that they can devote more time to the public’s business? City Council members and other city leaders are hoping their fellow residents answer “No” to that question, and that’s why voters will be asked to say “Yes” to Measure A on the November ballot. R ★ The ballot measure would raise the U D E monthly pay for City Council members to $1,000 from $600, and automatically adjust ★ 2 0 1 4 the pay annually to reflect cost- of-living increases, up to 5 percent. It would also end the odd practice of docking a member $25 for a missed meeting even when he or she is absent on official business. Some current council members say they work an average of 30 hours weekly in their capacity as public servants. Their $600 compensation amounts to about $5 an hour, they say. Voters in 2006 rejected an attempt to raise council pay to $1,500 a month, but the Measure A compromise seems fair compensation for citizens willing to do the hard work of creating policy and making decisions that affect every aspect of life in Mountain View. The council meets every week, except for a partial summer recess, and in addition to those long meeting hours must spend many more doing the homework it takes to make informed decisions and stay in touch with the community. Measure A may make it possible for more working people with fresh ideas and a willingness to turn more of their efforts toward public service to consider a run for a council seat in the future. The Voice urges you to support Measure A. oters in the El Camino Healthcare District have three strong choices when they mark their ballots for two seats on the district’s board of directors. Incumbent David Reeder wants to continue working toward the district goal of ensuring better continuity of care for patients; Margaret Abe-Koga wants to turn her attention to public health matters as she leaves her seat on the Mountain View City Council later this year; and Dr. Peter Fung wants to work toward improving access to health care, addressing mental health issues, and stemming the growing health crisis of VOTE obesity through education and introducing G programs in local schools. While we believe that all three candidates offer many strengths and would serve the district well as board members, we endorse Reeder and Abe-Koga for the four-year board seats. The director of the stroke program at El Camino Hospital, Fung has many good ideas for achieving his goals. But members of the district board do double-duty as members of the El Camino Hospital board of directors, and because Fung works for the hospital, the question arises over whether he would have to recuse himself from certain decisions because of conflict of interest rules. Hospital officials would not provide clarity on the question. ★ DAVID REEDER Now finishing his 16th year on the board, Reeder wants to continue his work, saying he’s “uniquely situated” to help implement the district’s recently approved strategic plan. Helping to create a better “continuum” of care, in which El Camino Hospital patients would have better medical oversight before and after their hospital stay, including when they’re transferred to a skilled nursing facility or rehabilitation center, is one of his highest priorities, he said. As a board member, he responded in a constructive way to a state agency’s assessment that the district lacked transparency and accountability in key areas, and the board has since put changes in place to address those concerns. Reeder is knowledgeable, responsive and determined to further improve health care in the district. He deserves another term on the board. MARGARET ABE-KOGA Abe-Koga is a member of that state agency, known as LAFCo, that criticized the health care district for a lack of transparency and accountability, so she’s up to speed on some of the issues involving the district’s governance. And with her experience on the City Council and other public boards, she knows a thing or two about effective governance. Among her goals are improving accessibility and affordability of care for residents of the district, which includes Mountain View, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, and parts of Sunnyvale, Palo Alto and Cupertino. If elected, she would be the only member who lives in Mountain View; all current board members and fellow candidates are residents of Sunnyvale, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills. She thinks it’s important for a Mountain View resident with knowledge about the district’s northernmost community to take part in the district’s policy- and decision-making process, and we agree. The Voice urges you to support Margaret Abe-Koga. Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014 D Yes on Measure N E nrollment in the Los Altos School District has burgeoned in on students, next page it is recent years, and continues to grow.Continued At 5,380 the highest it’s been in 40 years, according to a task force that studied enrollment growth and reviewed options to address it. The big difference in the enrollment situation the district was in 40 years ago and that which it finds itself in today is that in the 1970s, the district had 12 schools to house its students. Today, it has only nine. Voters this fall will be asked to approve Measure N, a $150 million bond measure that would go far in addressing the district’s enrollment dilemma. Along with helping to fund acquisition of a new school site and creation of new space on existing campuses, the passage of bond Measure N might even strengthen a now-tenuous new detente between the district and Bullis Charter School, which have locked horns in recent years over the housing of the charter school. Officials and parents of both the district and Bullis have joined forces to campaign for the bond measure’s passage. If Measure N passes, property owners would annually pay $30 per $100,000 of assessed value on their property. The district has in place a 28-member committee charged with identifying potential facilities projects to be financed with bond revenue, should the measure pass. The committee includes district parents, representatives of community organizations, and residents of all three towns within the district boundaries: Mountain View, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills. The time has come to address current and near-future overcrowding on the district’s nine campuses. The Voice urges Los Altos School District voters to support Measure N. V ViewPoint QLETTERS VOICES FROM THE COMMUNITY CONCERNED ABOUT ‘MILITARIZATION’ Regarding the acquisition of military-grade weapons, I’d suggest that Sgt. Jaeger — before he passes judgment on any “reactionary” response by Mountain View residents — talk with the children of the grandfather who was shot and killed by a paramilitary police force as he lay face-down on his floor. Or ask the man how he feels about paramilitary police after being punched, stomped, laughed at and had his arm broken but was released when he turned out not to be the drug dealer they were looking for. Or sit down with the Miami cops who ordered a woman out of her house at the point of several guns and was only then found to be a circuit court judge. Or meet with the elderly couple whose house was raided up to three times a week — more than 50 times in total — due to a police computer glitch. Then Sgt. Jaeger can tell us how all of those victims were made healthy, whole and happy again. There are too many of these stories already. This is a serious problem and it needs to be confronted before any more “free” armaments are obtained. The requirements for specific gear need to be established clearly before acquisition and the policies for using them, providing training and limiting access to only fully certified individuals must be defined, reviewed, agreed upon and consistently upheld. I wouldn’t want someone to dictate police practices without fully understanding the reality of the officers’ environment; in turn, I would expect the police and Mountain View government to make the same effort in understanding why citizens are seriously concerned about the creeping militarization of our local police force. Any move which results in reduced overall safety and increased risk of incidents against innocent citizens should be summarily rejected by the police, government and the people of Mountain View. Take the time to understand our fears and work with us instead of treating this as merely a costsaving issue and dismissing our concerns with some glib statements in the local paper. Carl Madson Wasatch Drive ‘ZERO EMISSIONS’ A FEEL-GOOD MYTH Let me say right upfront that as an inventor myself with ethics and scruples, I hold Elon Musk in the highest regard. He is perhaps my No. 1 inventive icon, not only for his cuttingedge technology in the EV industry, but because he threw open his patents to the world in hopes that it would advance the EV industry to dominance in personal transportation. However, having said all this, I must scold Tesla for promulgating a falsehood. Yesterday I drove behind a brand new Tesla S car here in Mountain View that had no license plates yet, and inside the rear license plate frame it said “Zero Emissions.” This is one of the biggest myths perpetrated on the naive public. There’s simply no such thing as “zero emissions” — not now and not ever. The collective carbon footprint in the manufacturing of every Tesla car is not insignificant; indeed it’s on par with the carbon footprints in production of most internal combustion engine cars. So there’s clearly no such thing as “zero emissions” in the production of a Tesla. Then there’s the matter of the daily recharging of the large battery packs of every Tesla: 99 percent of the electricity to recharge the batteries of a Tesla comes from the grid, and the grid gets 99.99 percent of its power from the use of fossil fuels. Clearly no “zero emissions” there! Even if a given Tesla owner has his/her own PV system at home or work to re-charge the Tesla’s batteries, the collective carbon footprint to manufacture, ship, and install every PV panel is not insignificant. Loads of fossil fuels and their byproducts are used in the PV industry. Again, clearly no “zero emissions” there! Elon Musk needs to dump the “zero emissions” claim and perhaps just tell the factual truth based in the laws of physics. The “zero emissions” thing is a nice warm-and-fuzzy notion to give Tesla owners the sense they are eco-correct, but it’s a complete falsehood, and everyone needs to be enlightened to this. Jeffrey Van Middlebrook Easy Street Support Mountain View Voice’s coverage of our community. Memberships begin at only 17¢ per day Join today: SupportLocalJournalism.org October 10, 2014 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q 23 INTRODUCING A COLLABORAT ION THAT’S GOOD KARMA FOR THE ENTIRE SOUTH ASIAN COMMUNITY. THE PALO ALTO MEDICAL FOUNDAT ION AND THE SOUTH ASI AN HEART CENTER ARE JOINING FORCES TO PREVENT DIABETES AND HEART ATTACKS. El Camino Hospital’s South Asian Heart Center and the Palo Alto Medical Foundation (PAMF) are now collaborating to provide comprehensive, collaborative care for South Asians. PAMF offers expert medical management, with access to physicians who understand the high risks facing South Asian patients. The South Asian Heart Center offers advanced screening for heart disease and insulin resistance to identify inherited and emerging risk factors. Participants also receive lifestyle counseling on meditation, exercise, diet and sleep. The two organizations are now linked electronically, so communication and physician referrals are seamless. It’s part of our commitment to delivering personalized care to the South Asian community — a healthy partnership with your wellbeing at heart. From left: Ashish Mathur, Executive Director, South Asian Heart Center Ronesh Sinha, MD, Co-founder, PRANA South Asian Program at PAMF Learn more: Watch a video about our new partnership at www.goodkarma.org 24 Q Mountain View Voice Q MountainViewOnline.com Q October 10, 2014
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