Case study: Seattle fast-tracks housing—SV cities could, too

Seattle’s mayor wants to cut subjective design reviews and greenlight code-compliant housing without endless back-and-forth. As the City of Seattle reports, this trims months off construction starts. San Jose, Mountain View, and Palo Alto could follow suit: SB 330 already lets cities exempt qualifying multifamily projects from Architectural Review Board purgatory.

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christopher escher
LA county muni achieves homelessness functional zero, SJ lags further behind

Multiple CA cities (Bakersfield, Redondo Beach, etc.) have solved their homelessness crises. Not so in San Jose and Santa Clara County, as the homelessness crisis continues to trend upwards. Signal Hill is the first city in LA County to achieve a “functional zero homelessness,” and their leaders hope others will follow their model, as explained in the Signal Tribune. 

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christopher escher
Destination San Jose: The San Francisco & San Jose Railroad

Sometimes good ideas last forever. And Boxing Day is a good day to appreciate them. Local historian April Halberstat gives us an affectionate review of our epic, historic local rail line--now called Caltrain.  An Opp Now exclusive.

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christopher escher
A poem for Christmas Eve, 2025

Overflowing sunshine. Flowers, green grasses, and fruits of every kind. Early California poet (and namesake of the Oakland park) Joaquin Miller (1837–1913) revels in the wonders of “A California Christmas,” below. We echo his gratitude for this special place and the folks in it—and, from the Opp Now team, heartily wish you a wonderful Holiday Season and New Year. :-)

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christopher escherComment
A Beat SJ Xmas

It's not North Beach, but SJ has its own legacy of Beat Literature from the 1950s. And perhaps none is more stirring than this dreamy, little-remarked passage from Jack Kerouac's The Dharma Bums, in which the narrator hitches a (literal and spiritual) ride on a southbound Xmas Eve train, beginning his SJ-to-LA journey from the sidings of the old Southern Pacific station downtown.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Remembering: Christmas in Naglee Park, 1924

Historian April Halberstadt whisks us back to Christmas a century ago in her historic San Jose home—when local agriculture was booming, the city rapidly expanding via annexations, and the faith-centered Wright family (living in now-Halberstadt’s home) making their mark on CA politics. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Perspectives: how to strengthen SCC’s mom-and-pop food businesses

Small restaurants/food trucks are disproportionately impacted by hidden gov’t fees, fines, and taxes (maybe that’s why so many are closing up shop and heading elsewhere). So Opp Now contributors Gus Mattammal and Susan Shelley have two main suggestions for local gov’t: “aggressively” permit new vendors, and break up big food monopolies. An exclusive.

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SJ City readying a flurry ($800m worth!) of new taxes

SJ residents recently reported receiving an online poll from City Manager Jennifer Maguire exploring resident feelings about a tsunami of expensive new city taxes. The potential levies range from upgrading SAP Center to fixing storm drains. This type of polling is often used by cities to determine what messages might help a particular proposed tax increase succeed in an election. A summary of the poll's new tax 'n' spend aspirations below.

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christopher escher
Case study Sioux Falls: Flexible, free markets can fix transit failures

Washington Policy Center highlights Mariya Frost’s article on Sioux Falls’ SAM Flex app, powered by Pantonium’s tech. It ditches fixed routes for on-demand bus rides, cutting costs and CO2 while boosting rider access. With similar tech in nearby Sacramento, Silicon Valley has the opportunity to adopt this private-sector innovation and take its transit to another level.

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christopher escher
☆ Huge & deceptive transit bailout tax planned for next fall

If you thought it was over with the bait-n-switch Measure A, think again. November, 2026 will see SB63 on the ballot--a deceptive measure which aims to hide the bailout of the region's bankrupt  and unsustainable mass transit systems under the guise of "road repairs." An Opp Now exclusive collated by our editorial team. 

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☆ Keeping home construction affordable in Silicon Valley: a multi-pronged approach

Pre-approving modular design libraries. Waiving impact fees for workforce housing. And–yes—keeping CEQA under control. SF Briones Society’s Jay Donde and former Hollister mayor Victor Gomez lay out how local gov’t might streamline the building process—and save residents thousands along the way. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Mulcahy's Measure A endorsement bypasses basic city planning principles

SJ CM Michael Mulcahy sang the praises of the impact of bankrupt county hospitals in his district as he endorsed the "bait-n-switch" Measure A. Problem is: Mulcahy ignores the negative impact big hospital developments can (and do) have on local residents. Experts and National Community Reinvestment Coalition daylight what Mulcahy doesn't see. 

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christopher escher