End Local Hunger

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

End Local Hunger TOGETHER, WE ARE CREATING A HUNGER-FREE COMMUNITY CELEBRATING YOUR COMMITMENT TO END LOCAL HUNGER SHFB.org 2015 FOOD & FUND DRIVES: A YEAR IN REVIEW PROGRAM 99.7 NOW Sony Playstation Antoine Bethea 25th ANNUAL RECOGNITION EVENT THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 2016 San Jose HOG Motorcycle Club Quotient Applied Materials Fondue Party at 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM Award Pick-up, Hors d’oeuvres, Drinks, Music & Exclusive Warehouse Tours at 7:00 PM A few words from our CEO, Kathy Jackson at 7:10 PM Symantec Legal Team Dessert and Coffee Boy Scouts of America Nimble Storage Golden Gate Bridge a special thank you to the following: Aurora Catering for preparing a delicious spread Push Button Flix for the entertaining photo booth Deejay Mikey for providing fun and lively music GoDaddy YouTube FOOD & FUND DRIVES: A YEAR IN REVIEW PROGRAM 1 SPECIAL HONOREES AWARD WINNERS Thank you to the CONGRATULATIONS following groups for your BRASS RING CORPORATE CHAMPION outstanding efforts. Any company or organization that earned The company with the highest total Companies and organizations coordinating drives throughout the year are eligible for 500,000 points or more in a single year points in each of three size categories awards. Award totals are determined by food donations (1 pound = 1 point) and financial Apple Ebay Fewer than 250 Participants: contributions (1 dollar = 2.5 points). Applied Materials Google Latham & Watkins Cisco SanDisk 250-1,000 Participants: Cypress Semiconductor Cypress Semiconductor Intuitive Surgical Safeway, Inc. BLUE Intuitive Surgical Samsung Semiconductor, Inc. PLATINUM More than 1,000 Participants: CORPORATE DIAMOND Juniper Networks, Inc. San Jose Improv 25,000 to 49,999 points or per Google Kaiser Permanente Medical SanDisk Corporation capita donation of 111 to 224 FOOD BOWL 50,000+ points or per capita Offices - Milpitas Save Mart Supermarkets points donation of 225+ points Kaiser Permanente South Bay SEG, Inc. A9 The company with the highest per capita Kappa Beta Delta - Silver Leaf Neighborhood COMMUNITY CHAMPION Adobe Systems, Inc. Abbott Laboratories Skyline College Association points and more than 50,000 total points Align Technology, Inc. Alcatel-Lucent Non-corporate groups with the highest King Amplification Skadden, Arps, Slate, Altera Corporation Alice’s Restaurant in a single year KLA - Tencor Meagher & Flom LLP total points in each of the three size Apple Inc. Ameriprise Financial KLEEBO! Promotional Products SolarCity Cypress Semiconductor Applied Materials, Inc. Auction BDI categories Lam Research Symantec Corporation Arista Networks Bay Area Delinquents Latham & Watkins Synopsys, Inc. Fewer than 250 Participants: Bank of America BlackBerry Leap 4 Joy Target (Corporate Office) Becton, Dickinson and Company Boy Scouts of America, Dave Severns Memorial Golf Tournament Lee’s Sandwiches The Skoll Foundation and Brocade Pacific Skyline Council EMPLOYEE FOOD BOWL Lifestreet Corporation Capricorn Investment Group Burlingame City Library C & T Recycling The company with the highest per capita 250-1,000 Participants: Linear Technology Corporation Umbrella Salon Carlos Dunlap/NVIDIA Cadence Design Systems, Inc. Congregation Beth David LinkedIn UPS employee points (corporate gifts not (Colleagues and Campbell United LIVe to Give Visa, Inc. Friends) A-List Methodist Church included) and more than 50,000 points in More than 1,000 Participants: Lockheed Martin Employees’ Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Cisco Carpet & FabriCare Institute Foundation Yahoo a single year Menlo Atherton High School Coherent Carr McClellan P.C. Lucky 7 King Combined Federal Campaign Charles Armstrong School Cypress Semiconductor Maxim Integrated Comerica Bank Congregation Kol Emeth Medtronic Congregation Beth Jacob Synagogue Menlo Atherton High School Cub Scout Pack 65 of San Carlos Cornerstone Research Microsoft Giving Campaign Cupertino Electric, Inc. Dartmouth Middle School MILLION POUNDS CLUB Mollie Stone’s Markets CuriOdyssey at Coyote Point DeVero Nanosys, Inc. Any company or organization that Cypress Semiconductor Disco Hi-Tec America, Inc. NDC Dave Severns Memorial Dollar Tree accumulates the equivalent of a million NetApp Golf Tournament Duran & Venables, Inc. pounds of food in points. Totals are Nimble Storage, Inc. Dell Inc East Foothills Earth NXP Semiconductors cumulative year over year and will be Dialog Semiconductor Day Party 2015 Oak Grove High School eBay Inc. Equinix recognized in increments of 5 million. Oracle Electronic Arts Ernst & Young Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe EMC Corporation Essex Property Trust, Inc. 60 Million: Pacific Western Bank Empire Broadcasting Evergreen School District Cisco Paisley Helping People (KLIV/KRTY) Frank, Rimerman + Co. LLP Palo Alto Networks Equity Residential Gap Inc. 30 Million: Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Facebook, Inc. Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher Pittman LLP Cypress Semiconductor Feeding My Ohana Google Polycom Fenwick & West LLP Hewlett-Packard 20 Million: Precious Touch Foothills Congregational Church Hilltop Foundation Premier Nissan of San Jose Google Genentech Inc. Hudson Pacific Properties Proofpoint, Inc. Genesys San Jose/Santa Clara Quotient Technology Inc. 1 Million: Google, Inc. Infoblox Rachel Carson Elementary School Hendy Guesthouse Intel Corporation Align Technology RAGA(N) HGST a Western Digital Company Irvine Company Rambus Inc Coherent Hieu Le JC Cadena, DDS, MS Redwood City Public Library IBM Los Altos High School EMC Corporation REG Life Sciences Intuit 2 SPECIAL HONOREES AWARD WINNERS 3 AWARD WINNERS AWARD WINNERS Hospira Samsung Telecommunications Gigamon, Inc In Memory of Paul Lee America SILVER Gilead Sciences, Inc. Instart Logic San Jose City College 4,000 to 9,999 points or per Golden 1 Credit Union IntApp Inc San Jose Public Library capita donation of 30 to 50 GoPro It’s a Girl Thing Administration/MLK Branch points Greystar - Franklin 299 Kaiser Santa Clara San Mateo High School Groupware Technology 2Wire Inc. DBA Pace Americas Kate Hammond Santa Clara County Open Hortonworks, Inc. AbbVie Kellogg Space Authority HP Security Voltage Accuray Incorporated Kulesa Faul Santa Clara County Social IES Commercial Adesto Technologies Lasya’s and Vihaan’s Food Drive Services Agency Independence High School Aerohive Networks Macias Gini & O’Connell LLP School for Independent Learners Integrated Device Alain Pinel Realtors Saratoga Macy’s Valley Fair Sequoia Hospital Technology, Inc. ANSYS, Inc. Manor Way Pirate Village Intermolecular Applied Survey Research (ASR) Margaret Pauline Brown SGC Financial & Insurance Jelli Aragon High School Elementary School Services, Inc. JLL Ariosa Diagnostics Marketo Sidley Austin- Palo Alto Jobs Daughters International, Aruba Networks Meadows Elementary School SJSU senior nursing students Bethel No. 129, San Jose ASML Midpeninsula Regional Skilled Nursing Rehab Center Jobvite AT&T Pioneers Golden Open Space District So. San Francisco Library Juniper Networks Gate Chapter #138 Mita’s Food Drive SPT Kaiser Permanente San Jose Avago Technologies Movoto Real Estate St. Maria Goretti Church KIPP Heartwood Academy Bank of America United MSP Chili Cook off Subaru of America KPMG Way Campaign Applied Materials Food Sort murdock portal cdc/cdi Teledyne Microwave Solutions Labcyte Bay Area Circuits Netscout San Jose Thermo Fisher Scientific Lane Medical Library, Stanford Bethel Lutheran Church New Leaf Community Markets ThermoFisher Scientific School of Medicine and School Paragon Technical Three Springs Ranch Neighbors Linear Technology Corporation Los Gatos Magazine Shirdi Sai Parivaar CPK Bristol-Myers Squibb GOLD Peninsula School Trimble Navigation Litepoint Lucky 7 Supermarket Community Group CRC Inc. Broadcom Corporation Pick-n-Pull - San Jose Trinity Presbyterian Church Lockheed Martin Space Marvell Semiconductor, Inc. Slalom Consulting 10,000 to 24,999 points or Cytokinetics Burnett Middle School Pick-n-Pull Auto Dismantlers of San Carlos Systems FLDP Morgan Lewis & Bockius Space Systems Loral per capita donation of 51 to Cytokinetics, Inc. California Retired Teachers Pinger, Inc. United Refrigeration Los Altos Christian School Motorola Sunnyvale Squeaky Hinge Haunted Garage 110 points Daly City Library Association (CalRTA) Div. 6 Pluribus Networks UPS Los Altos Golf & Country Club National Instruments St. Jude Medical Daly City Public Library California Seniors Care AB41 Turkey Drive PremiereScan Visa Inc. Los Gatos Union School District Netflix Stanford Circle K Westlake Branch Carlmont High School Accenture Recology South Valley VTS Medical System Macy’s Hillsdale NVIDIA Foundation Star One Credit Union David J. Powers & Associates Carlsen Porsche AcelRx Pharmaceuticals RedSeal, Inc. Western Digital MAP Royalty, Inc. O’Melveny & Myers LLP Structural Integrity Associates Deloitte & Touche LLP Casa dei Bambini Air Systems Foundation Inc. Rigel Pharmaceuticals Xangati, Inc. Marshall Pomeroy Orlando, Mitts, Moore Synaptics Discover Chiropractic CDNetworks, Inc. Alpha & Omega Semiconductor Rompacoglioni Car Crew Xilinx, Inc. Elementary School and Company Texas Instruments - Morgan Hill Central Concrete Supply Co., Inc. AMD Ropes & Gray LLP Yerba Buena High School MasterCard Palo Alto Bridge Club Unit 503 Tintri Inc. DPR Construction Chaboya Middle School Ameriprise Financial Rose Real Estate Group Zynga.org Mayfield Fund Paypal Inc. Travelzoo Dr. Stephanie Loller’s Chateau La Salle Mobile Amgen, Inc. Menlo Circus Club Perkins Coie LLP Varian Medical Systems Dental Office Home Park Anderson Honda Menlo-Atherton High School PTA PG&E Verint Americas, Inc. Driversed.com
Recommended publications
  • ESUHSD Weekly Report {WR} May 25, 2012
    ESUHSD Weekly Report {WR} May 25, 2012 Community & School 4th Annual Save Our Sports 5K Run/Walk Thanks to the 1,200 plus participants in this year’s 4th Annual Save our Sports 5K Run/Walk. The annual 5K Race helps raise desperately needed funds for the continuance of athletic programs in the East Side Union High School District. Congratulations Class of 2012 Apollo High School – May 19, 2012 Foothill High School – May 19, 2012 Andrew Hill High School – May 21, 2012 Pegasus High School – May 22, 2012 Santa Teresa High School -- May 22, 2012 Independence High School – May 23, 2012 James Lick High School – May 23, 2012 Phoenix High School – May 23, 2012 Mt. Pleasant High School – May 24, 2012 Oak Grove High School – May 24, 2012 Piedmont Hills High School – May 24, 2012 Silver Creek High School – May 24, 2012 W.C. Overfelt High School – May 24, 2012 Yerba Buena High School – May 24, 2012 Evergreen Valley High School – May 25, 2012 Accel Middle College – May 29, 2012 East Side Adult Education – May 30, 2012 Kudos International Science Fair Success for ESUHSD Student! McKenna Duzak, a junior at Oak Grove High School, not only won a fourth place at Intel International Science and Engineering Fair but also a 4 year renewable scholarship to Florida Institute of Technology ($15K/yr). McKenna's project on quantum dot solar cells was done entirely at school! Kudos to McKenna and her instructor, John Allen! Kudos The Piedmont Hills Vocal Jazz Ensemble earned a Command Performance Rating (the highest rating) at the Santa Cruz Jazz Festival on Friday, May 4, 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Trina Howell-Nguyen Lee
    WILLIAM BETH ABB CARLSON Archbishop Mitty High School Terman Middle School 1 yr 8 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T1 Synopsys Championship 2012 T27 SUSAN GAIL GERMERAAD INLOW Redwood Middle School Redwood Middle School 5 yr 11 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T53 Synopsys Championship 2012 T79 KATHLEEN ANGIE LOIA NGUYEN Lynbrook High School Piedmont Hills High School 2 yr 1 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T105 Synopsys Championship 2012 T131 TINI CHRIS RAMAN SPENNER Challenger School Harker School 2 yr 2 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T157 Synopsys Championship 2012 T183 NABIL LEONEI ABDULHAY CARRILLO Schmahl Science Workshop Summit San Jose 1 yr 1 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T2 Synopsys Championship 2012 T28 JERI YOUSSEF GLOEGE ISMAIL Homeschool-Gloege Schmahl Science Workshop 1 yr 1 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T54 Synopsys Championship 2012 T80 ANN ANTHONY LOREY NGUYEN Stanford Middle School Andrew Hill High School 6 yr 2 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T106 Synopsys Championship 2012 T132 ANU JON RANGANATHAN STARK Kennedy Middle School Monta Vista High School 1 yr 4 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T158 Synopsys Championship 2012 T184 PATRICK NARQUIZ ADAMS CERVANTES Bellarmine College Preparatory Silver Creek High School 3 yr 11 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T3 Synopsys Championship 2012 T29 JESSICA HOWELL GOLDSTEIN IVY KIPP San Jose Collegiate Valley Christian 1 yr 1 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T55 Synopsys Championship 2012 T81 CANDACE THUY-ANH LOVE NGUYEN Taylor School Challenger School 1 yr 6 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T107 Synopsys Championship 2012 T133 SUJATA NALINI REAST SURESH Stratford Middle School - SC Morrill Middle School 1 yr 3 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T159 Synopsys Championship 2012 T185 MAMTHA STEPHEN ADISESHAN CHANDLER Ramana Academy (homeschool) Buchser Middle School 3 yr 7 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T4 Synopsys Championship 2012 T30 ERICA KHADIJA GOLDSWORTHY IYER Jordan Middle School Kennedy Middle School 1 yr 6 yr Synopsys Championship 2012 T56 Synopsys Championship 2012 T82 BEN VIVIAN LOWELL NGUYEN Monta Vista High School Clyde L.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Initial Study San Jose Water Company Phase I Recycled Water Project File Number Pp10-089
    FINAL INITIAL STUDY SAN JOSE WATER COMPANY PHASE I RECYCLED WATER PROJECT FILE NUMBER PP10-089 APRIL 2010 REVISED JUNE 2010 LEAD AGENCY: City of San Jose 200 East Santa Clara Street San Jose, CA 95113 FINAL INITIAL STUDY SAN JOSE WATER COMPANY PHASE I RECYCLED WATER PROJECT FILE NUMBER PP10-089 APRIL 2010 REVISED JUNE 2010 LEAD AGENCY: City of San Jose 200 East Santa Clara Street San Jose, CA 95113 PREPARED BY: Analytical Environmental Services 1801 7th Street, Suite 100 Sacramento, CA 95811 TABLE OF CONTENTS SAN JOSÉ WATER COMPANY PHASE I RECYCLED WATER PROJECT FINAL INITIAL STUDY / MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 1-1 1.1 Purpose of Study ............................................................................................................... 1-1 1.2 Environmental Factors Potentially Affected ....................................................................... 1-1 1.3 Tiering ................................................................................................................................ 1-1 1.4 Evaluation Terminology ..................................................................................................... 1-3 1.5 Organization of the Initial Study ......................................................................................... 1-3 2.0 PROJECT DESCRIPTION ...........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Application for Admission
    OFFICE USE ONLY NAME San Jose/Evergreen Community College District APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION Colleague ID # LAST Term & College for which you are applying: FALL SPRING SUMMER 20 Date Check ONE college only Evergreen Valley College San José City College Initials If you plan on taking classes at BOTH colleges within this District, make sure you have a current application AT EACH COLLEGE 1 Legal Name Last Name First Name Middle Initial 2 Address Number & Street Apt. Number FIRST City State Zip Code 3 Telephone Number Home Other 4 Origin Walk-In Mail 5 Social Security Number 6 Birth Date (Necessary for Financial Aid applicants) MM DD YY Returning Student’s / ID # 7 Ethnic Background AL Asian/Laotian HCA Hispanic/Central America PACG Pac Islander/Guam A Asian AM Asian/Cambodian HM His/Mex Hisp/Amer PACH Pac Islander/Hawaiian AA African/American AV Asian/Vietnamese HSA Hispanic/South America PACS Pac Islander/Samoa AC Asian/Chinese AX Asian/Other HX Hispanic/Other PACX Pac Islander/Other AI Asian/Indian C Caucasian/Non-Hispanic NA Native American UNK Unknown AJ Asian/Japanese FI Filipino OTH Other Non-White XD Declined to State M.I. AK Asian/Korean H Hispanic P Pacific Islander 8 Gender Male Female 9 E-Mail Address 10 Type of Applicant 11 Major/Academic Program CODE Check if you are: If undecided, temporarily choose GENMJ.AS.1 (SJCC ONLY). Student Applicant (SAP) See CODE SHEET - Application CANNOT be processed without an academic program. Employee Applicant (EMA) 12 Admit Status (Fill in the one which best applies to you) N I am attending college for the first time after high school.
    [Show full text]
  • San Jose Public Library California Room Silicon Valley History Online Collection
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7k4023tp Online items available Guide to the San Jose Public Library California Room Silicon Valley History Online Collection San Jose Public Library California Room staff San Jose Public Library California Room Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library University of California 150 E. San Fernando St. San Jose, California 95112 Phone: (408) 808-2167 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.sjlibrary.org/research/special/ca/ © 2005 San Jose Public Library Guide to the San Jose Public Consult repository 1 Library California Room Silicon Valley History Online Collection Descriptive Summary Title: San Jose Public Library California Room Silicon Valley History Online collection Dates: 1859-1991 Bulk Dates: (bulk 1890-1940) Collection number: Consult repository Collector: San Jose Public Library California Room Collection Size: 119 items119 online items Repository: San Jose Public Library California Room. San Jose, California 95112 Abstract: The San Jose Public Library California Room collection includes books, photographs, maps, periodicals, clippings and ephemera. The collection covers all of California with special emphasis on San Jose and Santa Clara County. The majority of images chosen for this project were photographs selected from the California Room Photograph collection and the Arbuckle Photograph collection. Also included are ephemera and postcards. The images document businesses, street scenes, agriculture, government, transportation, buildings and special events located in San Jose and Santa Clara County. Languages: Languages represented in the collection: English http://content.cdlib.org/search?style=oac-img&sort=title&relation=ark:/13030/kt7k4023tp Access Collection open for research. Publication Rights The San Jose Public Library California Room can only claim physical ownership of the collection.
    [Show full text]
  • Downtown Walking
    N Montgomery St Clinton Ct Autumn A B C D E F G H I J d v N Blv Stockton Av A Guadalupe Gardens n Mineta San José Market Center VTA Light Rail Japantown African Aut t North S 1 mile to Mountain View 1.1 miles ame 0.8 miles International Airport ne American u i m a D + Alum Rock 1 n 3.2 miles e Community t r Terr Avaya Stadium St S N Almade N St James Services th Not 2.2 miles Peralta Adobe Arts + Entertainment Whole Park 0.2 miles 5 N Foods Fallon House St James Bike Share Anno Domini Gallery H6 Hackworth IMAX F5 San José Improv I3 Market W St John St Little Italy W St John St 366 S 1st St Dome 201 S Market St 62 S 2nd St Alum Rock Alum Food + Drink | Cafés St James California Theatre H6 Institute of H8 San José G4 Mountain View 345 S 1st St Contemporary Art Museum of Art Winchester Bike Share US Post Santa Teresa 560 S 1st St 110 S Market St Oce Camera 3 Cinema I5 One grid square E St John St 288 S 2nd St KALEID Gallery J3 San José Stage Co. H7 Center for the E5 88 S 4th St 490 S 1st St represents approx. Trinity Performing Arts Episcopal MACLA/Movimiento H8 SAP Center B2 255 Almaden Blvd 3 minutes walk SAP Center n St Cathedral de Arte y Cultura Latino 525 W Santa Clara St San José Sharks | Music m Americana 510 S 1st St tu Children’s D7 Tabard Theatre Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Campuses of Three San José Area High Schools That Are Represented in SIP 2019!
    Campuses of three San José area high schools that are represented in SIP 2019! Kickoff Deep engagement of high school students in authentic STEM research Close mentoring by expert researchers Nina Arnberg, Jessica Barron, Raja GuhaThakurta, Kristen Hart, Alexandria Leckliter (UCSC SIP team) Classroom Unit 2, University of California Santa Cruz Sunday, June 23, 2019 Introductions and Thanks Core of Administrative Team Mentor Human Resources Partners: Student Recruitment & Support Alexandria Leckliter Elani Zissimopoulos Alisal High School Ana Rodarte Isabel Corrales Castilleja School Jessica Barron Lisa Pauken Ceiba College Prep. Luis Garcia College Track (EPA, Oakland, Sacramento, SF) Marlee Perez Finances Creative School (Bangalore, India) Karrie Andre Nina Arnberg Downtown College Prep. (El Primero, Alum Rock) Raja GuhaThakurta Laboratory and Field Work Safety Eastside College Prep. Georgiana Bruce Kirby Prep. Project/Application Management System Steve Loveridge Gonzales High School Bob Stillerman UCSC Conference Services Harker School Workshops for Interns Michael Luttrell Khan Lab School Amanda Quirk Christine Marez Menlo School Deanna Seitz Minds Matter San Francisco Administrative Support (UCSC) North Monterey County High School Housing Division of Undergraduate Education Peninsula Bridge Kristen Hart (CRE) Miriam Ramirez Division of PBSci Santa Cruz High School Lizbeth Flores Sam Brito Educational Partnership Center Watsonville High School Lupe Martinez Victoria Deng Scott Brandt (Vice Chancellor Research) Yerba Buena High School
    [Show full text]
  • Spartan Daily
    SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 8 SEE THESE VIDEOS AND MORE ON SPARTANDAILY ON YOUTUBE NO LOVE FOR SJSU IN IOWA FIRST HIP HOP RUN CITYDANCE SAN JOSE SERVING SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1934 SPARTAN DAILY Volume 147. Issue 121 www.sjsunews.com/spartandaily Tuesday,Wednesday, September August 24,27, 2016 LIVE ON THE LAWN MEDAL OF ARTS San Jose State alum honored BY SHELLISE WEST in many ways, our national soul. STAFF WRITER They’re central to who are are as President Barack Obama Americans.” said Obama. presented playwright, director Valdez, who attended SJSU and San Jose State University in 1960 began his career after alum Luis Valdez with the 2015 winning a playwright competition National Medal of Arts Thursday for his one-act play The Theft for his contribution to Chicano according to his biography. theatre and arts. Known for his work in Zoot The ceremony included notable Suit, he returned to the theatre journalists, authors, and directors department to put on a production lasted briefl y with an address from with students in the spring of 2015. President Barack Obama before The production that focused on RAYMOND BALTAZAR | SPARTAN DAILY honoring each awardee. Latino racial injustice in Los SEE FULL PHOTO ESSAY ON PAGE 4 “The arts and humanities are See VALDEZ page 3 TIME TO VOTE SWASTIKAS INSIDE Propositions occupy Off enders: Student Union Th eater ‘It was just a joke’ BY JASON DUNHAM Proposition 63 would also affect the large- STAFF WRITER capacity magazine ban from 2000. By extending the ban’s effect to purchases that BY ITZEL CASTRO California gun legislation and the death STAFF WRITER penalty were the focus of discussion at the were made before the original 2000 ban.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic Strategy That Can Help Guide Policies, Projects, and Investments for the Next Five Years
    San Jose CAPITAL OF SILICON VALLEY Economic Development Strategy N O V E M B E R 2 0 0 3 Prepared by Expert Advisors Office of City Manager Dena Belzer, President, Strategic Economics Del D. Borgsdorf Doug Henton, President, Collaborative Economics City Manager Jim King, Founder, Applied Development Economics Office of Economic Development Paul Krutko Stephen Levy, Director, Center for Director Continuing Study of the California Economy Dr. AnnaLee Saxenian, Professor, UC Berkeley Paul Silvern, Partner, Hamilton, Project Leader Rabinovitz & Alschuler Kim Walesh Assistant Director Office of Economic Development Special thanks to the more than 300 people who provided ideas and suggestions for Project Team this strategy (see Appendix for listing). Nanci Klein Michael Bills John Lang Deanna Chow Laurel Prevetti Stan Ketchum Ru Weerakoon Leslie Little Allison Novak Lisa Ranada Ellya Robello Rachel VanderVeen John Weis Please direct comments to: Office of Economic Development www.sjeconomy.com email: [email protected] phone: 408-277-5880 fax: 408-277-3615 2 S A N J O S E E C O N O M I C D E V E L O P M E N T S T R A T E G Y TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ......................................................................................................................... 4 PART I. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................... 10 PART II. RECOMMENDATIONS IIA. Vision: San Jose’s Distinctive Identity .....................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • HONORABLE MAYOR FROM: Jill Bourne and CITY COUNCIL
    TO: HONORABLE MAYOR FROM: Jill Bourne AND CITY COUNCIL SUBJECT: SJ ACCESS – STUDENT HOTSPOT DATE: April 29, 2021 PROGRAM OVERVIEW Approved Date 4/29/2021 INFORMATION This memorandum provides a detailed overview of the SJ Access – Student Hotspot program, which has provided 12,800 student households with a hotspot and a high-speed unlimited data plan for the main purpose of connecting to distance learning. As noted in the Rules and Open Government Committee Meeting on April 7, 2021, an Informational Memorandum was requested to provide an overview of the Student Hotspot program, in lieu of the deferred Annual Report of the Education and Digital Literacy Strategy, to be heard by the Neighborhood Services and Education Committee in Fall 2021. A single page overview of the program is provided as Attachment A. School Closures On March 13, 2020, the Santa Clara County Office of Education (SCCOE) announced that beginning on Monday, March 16, 2020, schools in Santa Clara County would shift to distance learning in response to growing cases of COVID-19 in the community. This closure was originally announced for a three-week duration and preceded the March 16 announcement of a regional Shelter-in-Place order. With few exceptions, schools remained closed and relied on distance learning programs through June 2020, and remained closed for the majority of the 2020- 2021 school year until April 2021, when Local Education Agencies (LEAs) began large-scale reopening plans, many of which include a hybrid learning approach (leveraging both distance and in-person learning). Addressing Insufficient Connectivity On April 21, 2020, staff provided the City Council with an update on digital access and inclusion efforts, specifically related to the need to assist schools and students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places I ] §Gp Registration Form I
    (Oct. 1990) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places I ] §gp Registration Form i • _ _„_....—•- This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. ?See instructions in Hovy to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete eaihJtem by marking"x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicaole." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NFS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property________________________________________RELt^Fn/r''!^ historic name Alviso, Jose Maria, Adob°—————————————— other names/site number CA-SC1 -15? ___________________ 2. Location street & number Q? P-jprfmnnt- Pnari ___________________________ G not for publication city or town Mi Ip-it-ac;_____________________________________ D vicinity state ______rj=n -ifn-rnia code CA county fianivi ria-ra_____ code ngc; zip code 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, 1 hereby certify that this^Q nomination Q request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property S3 meetdlO does not meet the National Register criteria 1 recommend that this property be considered significant d nationally £H stat§wid^ Q/tocally.
    [Show full text]
  • Addressing the Needs of the Homeless: a San José Library Partnership Approach
    San Jose State University SJSU ScholarWorks Faculty and Staff Publications Library 1-1-2009 Addressing the Needs of the Homeless: A San José Library Partnership Approach Lydia N. Collins San Jose State University Francis E. Howard San Jose State University, [email protected] Angie Miraflor San Jose Public Library Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/lib_pub Part of the Inequality and Stratification Commons, Library and Information Science Commons, and the Politics and Social Change Commons Recommended Citation Lydia N. Collins, Francis E. Howard, and Angie Miraflor. "Addressing the Needs of the Homeless: A San José Library Partnership Approach" The Reference Librarian (2009): 109-116. https://doi.org/10.1080/ 02763870802546472 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Library at SJSU ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty and Staff Publications by an authorized administrator of SJSU ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Addressing the Needs of the Homeless: A San José Library Partnership Approach In 2003, the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library opened its doors to the diverse San José, California community. The joint city-university library system consisting of San Jose Public and the San Jose State University Libraries won national acclaim for its architectural design (Berry III, 2004), including two sets of main doors which permit entrance from the city side with a clear view into the campus on the university side. This architectural feature permits a person, independent of his or her economic means, to enter the main city library building and “see” the possibility of entering the campus to earn a degree and advance socially, economically, and professionally.
    [Show full text]