Columns

Columns

Dewan: Child care is essential infrastructure

Economic development starts with early childhood development. Decades of evidence shows access to high-quality early learning and care programs has short- and long-term benefits. The best public investments ensure all children have access to high-quality child care, early care and education. Child care is essential infrastructure for our economy. Many child care providers are small...

Silver Taube: The dangers of AI in the workplace

Artificial intelligence has the potential to transform our lives. It is now used to read X-rays with greater precision than radiologists and spot cancer growths no human doctor can detect. In one clinical trial, AI helped detect 20% more cases of breast cancer than radiologists. But AI also has risks, particularly in employment where a...

Ritchie: Surf solutions—Silicon Valley to Santa Cruz

San Jose and Santa Cruz have had a symbiotic relationship in commerce and leisure since the non-Indigenous modern founding of both regions in the 19th century. From mass clear cutting redwood logging to the tourism boom of early days to the tech boom of today, if you still believe that is going on. It is....

Bramson: Building our way out of local control

The question of who puts what where in a given community is an interesting one. For decades, the authority of land use — the power to decide whether or not commercial, residential, industrial and a host of other possibilities are allowed on a given parcel — has fallen to the municipal government where the plot...

Mallon: Creating a public transit system we can be proud of

September is Transit Month in the Bay Area, an annual celebration of public transportation and its role in our communities. In other parts of the Bay Area, there are news conferences, ride-alongs with elected officials and various events. But here in Santa Clara County, September is just a typical month, where residents express the usual...

Cortese: Join me for a picnic by the lake

I’m thrilled to extend a warm invitation to my inaugural Picnic by the Lake Multicultural Festival and Resource Fair. Mark your calendars for Saturday, Sept. 30 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the beautiful Hellyer County Park. This free event is a celebration of our vibrant community, and everyone is welcome. You’ll be greeted...

Robinson: San Jose mayor has the wrong response to labor agreement

San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan’s negative response to the city’s new labor agreement is misguided and will ultimately cost him politically. Leading the city isn’t easy, and offending and diminishing your workforce leads to toxic results. The mayor complains that “service cuts” will have to take place as a result of paying city workers compensation...

Dewan: Our students need safe routes to school

As the new school year is underway, families are making decisions about travel to and from school. More and more families are considering options for their children to walk or ride a bike to school. The Safe Routes Partnership, a national group, offers ideas for communities to use in planning and preparing safer routes to...

Editorial: San Jose mayor needs to go all-in on addressing homelessness

San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan began his first term with an optimistic lens on resolving homelessness in the city. Eight months later his position has hardened. The mayor has confronted reality in a city where 89% of the population wants the homeless problem to disappear. Solutions are not happening fast enough for Mahan. After homeless people...

Bramson: Calling the question on criminalization 

Sometimes, when things get bleak, we need to look back to move forward. In 1939, John Steinbeck published “The Grapes of Wrath.” Set during the Great Depression, the story follows the Joad family, Oklahoma farmers who were forced to leave their land due to economic hardships. A few years earlier and across the pond in...