Analysis, Case Studies, and Commentary
Silicon Valley is already taxed to the brink, says Pat Waite: absent accountability, the push won’t stop. He asks why CA has the highest rate of poverty in the nation (Supplemental Poverty Level metric), and yet politicians seek to raise taxes while failing to make housing cheaper. Will this be the year voters demand substantive answers? An Opportunity Now exclusive look forward to 2026.
Politicians should stand by their word like the solemn responsibility it is. So says Irene Smith of Path Seldom Traveled, who argues that politically expedient or otherwise tokenized, revocable endorsements do grave dishonor to the City of San Jose, and to the voters who look to leaders for guidance. Will politicians find integrity this year? An Opportunity Now exclusive 2026 prediction.
The “No on Prop 16” campaign which Tony Guan took part in got national attention, and he helped rally for the victorious plaintiffs in a US Supreme Court victory against racial preferences. In this Opportunity Now exclusive Q&A, he talks about the personal cost of activism, ongoing challenges, and the need to build networks and scout for local leaders, to have an even greater impact on state and local policy.
Former CA Assembly candidate Ted Stroll hopes state governance turns from destructive ideologies to practical solutions. Meanwhile, Denise Kalm of Right on the Left Coast argues the Bay Area’s homeless should get housing conditionally, not housing first. An Opportunity Now exclusive look ahead to 2026.
SCC Supes warned the H.R. 1 spending slowdown would cost $1B yearly, but Cupertino Vice Mayor Liangfang Chao says that’s exaggerated by multiples. She argues the real shortfall comes from overspending in the county hospitals that predates H.R. 1 by years. It can’t be patched up by the new Measure A sales tax. Yet now, after the ballot measure’s victory, will the county keep taxing its way out of mismanagement?
This week's prized Cognitive Dissonance award goes to D6 CM Michael Mulcahy. He praised—even after five adults were sent to hospital after a wild shooting spree in SJ's boozy San Pedro Square post Super Bowl— “the power of the experience economy.” An Opp Now exclusive.
Measure A hasn't even been implemented yet. But that hasn't dissuaded SJ City Council from aiming to squeeze hapless businesses and residents with altogether new ways of funding the City's bloated budgets.
Super Bowl gameday proved to be a Sunday Bloody Sunday in downtown SJ, with multiple shootings resulting in yet another fatality and multiple serious injuries. Various local media outlets report.
Financial pressures limit the expansion of the city's interim housing strategy; D9 candidate Hennessy elevates high-capacity shelter strategy.