SJ median rents up 5+% in first half of 2026
City officials crow, dubiously, that they’ve figured out “the model” for bringing down sky-high rents and making SJ more affordable. Facts on the ground tell a different, more sobering story. Apartments.com’s national rent report reveals that:
Rental prices in SJ (end of June 2026) are now up 5.2%, year-over-year.
The overall median rent in SJ stands at $3,058, after rising 1.4% last month alone.
--Apartments.com
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Regressive sales taxes (like upcoming transit tax) hurt the less fortunate the most
In the frenzy to bail out boondoggle fantasies like a BART-to-San Jose line, bureaucrats’ appeals to the most vulnerable fall flat when you understand just how harmful their proposed half-cent sales tax will be to the region’s lowest income earners. Stacked on top of Measure A’s countywide 5/8-cent hike, struggling San Joseans could soon be paying a 10.5% sales tax.
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Unsafer, still
The upsurge in violence in San Jose isn't just focused on donwntown's curiously-named "Entertainment Zones," which have attracted shootings, stabbings, and unruly crowds requiring police intervention. Domestic violence deaths in SJ are also tracking tracking much higher than 2025, according to San Jose Inside.
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Bay Area-wide leadership group opposes regional transit sales tax levy
Tax and transit experts from the region's five counties are rejecting this November's ballot initiative that aims to bail out the underperforming and grossly mismanaged transit agencies like VTA, BART, and SF Muni. Instead, The Committee for Affordable Bay Area Transit calls for long-overdue fiscal and operational reform at the transit agencies.
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More World Cup mayhem
Even though SJ tried to calm soccer watch events by requiring (free) tickets and moving the "parties" to SAP and Discovery Meadow, the July 5/6 scene devolved into mayhem--yet again. The Merc reports, below.
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First stabbings, then shootings
Predictably, more violent mayhem has occurred in SJ's downtown "Entertainment Zones." Multiple stabbings and property damage upended a June 30 soccer watch party at SJ's San Pedro Square. NBC Bay Area reports below.
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Fill 'er up blues
Assembly candidate Carol Pefley provides a useful primer as to why gas is so expensive in SV and all of CA. "California built a system where gas taxes rise automatically every year," she notes.
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☆ Bad Faith Buffy
It was certainly one of the more eye-popping acts of legislative hypocrisy in recent years. East Bay state Assembly member Buffy Wicks on June 29 trumpeted on X how she both wrote and voted for advancing the revised Local Taxpayer Act (2/3 voter threshold for new taxes),while at the same time saying she "adamantly opposed" the bill. Lance Christensen of the California Policy Center and longtime Sacramento watcher unpacks the double-dealing in this exclusive Opp Now Q&A.
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☆ SJ Merc pushes a “14-year” sales tax to save transit. Expert says that’s “misleading.”
A recent Mercury News article threatens the “sky is falling” if taxpayers don’t bail out transit, says Tom Rubin, who argues that ridership collapsed years ago. Where the Merc doesn’t look for cost savings, the former transit executive does: automate the trains like they did in Vancouver, hire way more part-time operators. Don’t like traffic? Encourage remote work because data show workers are driving, not riding, back to the office. An Opportunity Now exclusive rebuttal to the Merc.
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☆ Rubin: more tax money for “dirty” and “unsafe” BART, no signs of improvement
“People are leaving BART and other transit systems because they feel unsafe and because it's dirty,” says transit consultant Tom Rubin. While the Mercury News promotes a massive sales tax to rescue the troubled trains, Rubin asks of tax-happy government leaders: “why should they think if they give BART more money, that something will change? An Opportunity Now exclusive rebuttal to the Merc.
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☆ Should Bay Area taxpayers effectively pay BART’s union dues?
The Mercury News reports BART fares only cover 30% of costs, and suggests the only solution is a sales tax. But past transit executive Tom Rubin asks why BART is spending over a billion dollars to increase capacity, when ridership is down. He says BART could harness massive savings if they automate trains like they do in Vancouver. Why won’t the unions allow it? An Opportunity Now exclusive rebuttal to the Merc.
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☆ Do Bay Area train riders need a 14-year sales tax hike to keep their stations open?
A Mercury News piece whips up fear that BART will raise fares and shut down stations, if voters don’t agree to a half cent sales tax. Quote: “it’s an attack on the lower class.” But transit expert Tom Rubin says the top 20% of income earners would be the most impacted. Should the Bay Area’s poorest suffer a regressive sales tax to bail out rich commuters? An Opportunity Now exclusive rebuttal to the Merc.
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