Document 6573765
Transcription
Document 6573765
Menlo incumbent candidates comment on Greenheart’s campaign support | Page 9 T H E H O M E TO W N N E W S PA P E R F O R M E N LO PA R K , AT H E RTO N , P O RTO L A VA L L E Y A N D W O O D S I D E O C T O B E R 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 | VO L . 5 0 N O. 7 W W W. T H E A L M A N AC O N L I N E . C O M Woodside Community Theatre stages a t i r n u s C ’ ‘ Dozens of locals are involved in all phases of the production SECTION 2 8+ ACRE WOODSIDE ESTATE represented by Scott Dancer ,INDENBROOK2OAD7OODSIDE s -AGNIlCENTCOMPOUNDONMORETHANACRES s !CCLAIMED7OODSIDESCHOOLS s BEDROOMSBATHROOMS s %XCELLENTLOCATIONJUSTMINUTESTODOWNTOWN 7OODSIDEMINUTESTO3&/ s 4UDORESTATERESIDENCEWITHAPPROXIMATELY SQUAREFEET 'ATEHOUSE ,OG#ABIN 4HE'ROUNDS s BEDROOMSBATHROOMS s BEDROOMLOFTBATHROOM s ,IGHTEDTENNISCOURTPOOLSPA s !PPROXIMATELYSQUAREFEET s !PPROXIMATELYSQUAREFEET s %NTERTAINMENTTERRACE s !TTACHEDGARAGEWRAPAROUNDDECK s CARGARAGELARGEDECK s %XPANSIVELEVELLAWN Offered at $8,950,000 www.245Lindenbrook.com Coldwell Banker #1 Agent, Woodside/Portola Valley Offices, 2013 #3 Agent, Internationally, 2012 Ranked #35 Nationally by The Wall Street Journal, 2013 www.scottdancer.com 2QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 Scott Dancer 650.888.8199 scott@scottdancer.com CalBRE# 00868362 2969 Woodside Road Woodside, CA 94062 R EAL E STATE Q&A U PFRONT by Monica Corman How to Handle Multiple Offers Dear Monica: My wife and I have been going to open houses for weeks now and have observed how various agents conduct them. We have concluded that certain agents tend to price very low and tell prospective buyers that they expect the selling price to be much higher. They no doubt tell their sellers to expect higher prices as well. How can a buyer know what to offer in these situations? David S. Photo by Michelle Le/The Almanac Menlo Park Mayor Ray Mueller listens to Shaokang Zhang, president of the Guangdong Urban & Rural Planning & Design Institute, during a reception at the Rosewood Sand Hill hotel in Menlo Park. Mayor hosts Chinese delegation By Tom Douglas Special to the Almanac A Chinese delegation seeking to strengthen economic ties between the United States and China visited Menlo Park on Oct. 17 as part of a two-week trip to several U.S. cities. The stop in Menlo Park was the culmination of a West Coast visit that included Silicon Valley. On Friday, the Chinese delegates participated in a crosscultural discussion hosted by Menlo Park Mayor Ray Mueller, followed by a reception held in their honor. Mr. Mueller had visited China in June as part of a U.S. delegation that included local officials. In welcoming remarks at the Rosewood Sand Hill hotel in Menlo Park, the mayor noted that buildings along Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park house the premier venture capital firms in the world. “I believe that Menlo Park is the driving force of the Silicon Valley economy,” he said. “We are a town that lives and breathes innovation.” The leader of the Chinese delegation, Deputy Secretary General Zhang Qi from the Chinese Overseas Friendship Association in Beijing, said that Mr. Mueller‘s visit to China in June helped Mr. Zhang decide that he wanted to return the favor by leading a delegation from China to Silicon Photo by Michelle Le/The Almanac Zhang Qi led the Chinese delegation. Valley, with a Menlo Park visit being central to their plans. Mr. Zhang said that his delegation comes from a wide variety of cities and regions throughout China and that this demonstrates there is strong interest in enhancing commercial ties between the two countries and, in particular, between Silicon Valley and China. Both Mr. Mueller and Mr. Zhang noted that Silicon Valley has a high concentration of Chinese residents, which makes enhanced cooperation even more compelling and attractive. “We need to remember that relationships are dynamic, and always in flux,” Mr. Mueller said. “This means that we must continuously monitor our friendships and ensure that they remain strong. ... We must guard against what often happens when superpowers emerge, because relationships can drift apart.” He added: “We also need to analyze how we handle intellectual property issues.” Burlingame Mayor Michael Brownrigg commented that, like the United States, China is one of the major emitters of greenhouse gasses. He also stressed that China shares a water crisis with the United States and urged the members of the Chinese delegation to work toward finding acceptable ways to balance their desire to bring hundreds of millions of people into the middle class without sacrificing the environment in the process. “It can’t be business as usual” he said. Others in attendance were Woodside Mayor David Burow, Atherton Mayor Cary Wiest, and San Mateo County supervisors Warren Slocum and Don Horsley. Upon leaving the Rosewood event and boarding their bus, members of the Chinese delegation enjoyed posing for pictures alongside expensive and brightly colored Italian sports cars in the hotel’s driveway. “Someday this will be us,” one of the members of the delegation commented. The group will travel from the Bay Area to New York for additional meetings, followed by a return trip to China from the East Coast. A Dear David: The market is still very tight in this area and what you describe of pricing properties artificially low and then hyping buyers and sellers to expect selling prices to be much higher, only adds to the frenzy. Sellers are wise not to price a property too high because buyers will be put off by this. But they should price at a level where if they only receive one offer, and it is full price, that they will be satisfied. If they really think they should get more, then they should price their property higher. If a property is priced substantially lower than recent sales, buyers need to know how many other offers there are in order to compete. Good agents keep track of how many offers are likely and they continually communicate with agents about this right up to the time when offers are due. And unless there is a good reason not to, they allow agents to present offers directly to the seller. The process is open and more or less transparent. I represented buyers in two multiple offers this week and one was handled well and one wasn’t. The first agent accurately predicted the number of offers there would be and my buyer was able to make an offer based on good information. The second agent didn’t know how many offers were expected, wouldn’t allow me to present my client’s offer directly to the seller, and expected me to just drop off an offer at a certain time. The entire process was handled poorly and didn’t serve anyone well. My advice is to have a good agent vigilantly represent you and you will have the best chance of succeeding in this market. For answers to any questions you may have on real estate, you may e-mail me at mcorman@apr.com or call 462-1111, Alain Pinel Realtors. I also offer a free market analysis of your property. www.MonicaCorman.com %,**(676$/(2)7+(<($5 2112: 722))$//7($. 2))$//80%5(//$6 CALLING ON THE ALMANAC Newsroom: Newsroom fax: Advertising: Advertising fax: Classified ads: 223-6525 223-7525 854-2626 223-7570 854-0858 Q E-mail news, information, obituaries and photos (with captions) to: editor@AlmanacNews.com Q E-mail letters to the editor to: letters@AlmanacNews.com To request free delivery, or stop delivery, of The Almanac in zip code 94025, 94027, 94028 and the Woodside portion of 94062, call 854-2626. THE ALMANAC (ISSN 1097-3095 and USPS 459370) is published every Wednesday by Embarcadero Media, 3525 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA 940256558. Periodicals Postage Paid at Menlo Park, CA and at additional mailing offices. Adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation for San Mateo County, The Almanac is delivered free to homes in Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley and Woodside. Subscriptions for $60 per year or $100 per 2 years are welcome. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Almanac, 3525 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA 94025-6558. Copyright ©2014 by Embarcadero Media, All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. 9HWHUDQV%OYG5HGZRRG&LW\ 2SHQ:HG6XQ 7RPV2XWGRRU)XUQLWXUHFRP October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ3 More than just a home, it’s an INTERNET CAFE MENLO PARK | WOODSIDE 650.462.1111 | 650.529.1111 apr.com 4QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 Local News M E N L O P A R K | A T H E R T O N | W O O D S I D E | P O R T O L A V A L L E Y More than 200 at hearing for Mandarin school By Barbara Wood Almanac Staff Writer A public hearing on a Mandarin immersion charter school that has been proposed in the Menlo Park City School District drew a standingroom-only crowd of more than 200 people on Tuesday night, Oct. 14. The district’s board has a little less than a month before it must decide whether to authorize the proposed charter school. Charter founders want to start with 100 total students in two classes each of kindergarteners and first-graders in the fall of 2015, expanding by one grade level each year with the ultimate goal of a K-eighth-grade school with 450 students. There was lots of applause, and even a few standing ovations, on both sides of the issue as the audience had a chance to talk about why they do, or do not, support the petition for the proposed charter school. A longtime Menlo Park resident and former district science teacher made a plea for civility in the debate. “We want to model how we want our children to behave,” said Nancy Rankin. Ms. Rankin said she was “chilled” by some negative online posts about the charter founders. “Change is scary,” she said. “That fear often turns to anger and anger sometimes can be very destructive.” Carol Cunningham, a district resident and mother of a kindergartener and preschooler, made a presentation about the school to lead off the hearing. “The founders of the Menlo Mandarin Immersion Charter School are here tonight because we ultimately believe The district has scheduled a study session focusing on the charter proposal on Monday, Oct. 27, at the district office in Atherton. in having the freedom of choice and expanded opportunities for Menlo Park families when it comes to public education,” she said. That idea did not sit well with several teachers who spoke. “I believe the children of parents in Menlo Park have many choices in the types of educational opportunities that are offered,” including Spanish immersion, art, music, PE, librarians, sci- ence labs, multi-age learning and school gardens, said Sheila Warren, a librarian at Laurel School and co-president of the Menlo Park Education Association. “We are continually striving to be better and are continually meeting our goals for high achievement. We set the bar high and we go after it.” But Ms. Cunningham said the state’s charter law does not require charters be only in troubled districts. “Nowhere in the law does it state that charters were intended to benefit only poor-performing, failing or struggling public school districts. Charters are intended to benefit all kids,” Ms. Cunningham said. Several speakers urged the charter backers to withdraw their petition. “I really invite, request, beseech, beg, the Mandarin immersion charter advocates to reconsider and withdraw their petition and work within our community to bring about the change that we all are interested in, in improving and expanding foreign language opportunities for our children,” said Neil Swartzberg, a district parent. “While they may, and I’ll stress may, be legally entitled to pursue and even potentially obtain a charter school, just because you can do this under the law doesn’t mean that you have to ... pursue it.” Other parents said they worry the charter will take money from the district’s existing programs. “I am very concerned about the introduction of a charter school into our district,” said Sydney Merk. “I worry about our district not having See MANDARIN page 8 Atherton moves toward study of reducing lanes on El Camino Real By Barbara Wood Almanac Staff Writer A therton’s City Council on Wednesday night, Oct. 15, approved sending out a request for proposals for a study of the traffic conditions on El Camino Real, the first step toward making changes on the 1.6-mile stretch of highway that runs through the town. “It’s a necessary first step required by Caltrans,” said Community Services Director Michael Kashiwagi. El Camino is a state highway and the decision to change the lane configuration must be approved by Caltrans. Firms interested in doing the study for the town have until Nov. 12 to submit a proposal. The study will look at how traffic delays and safety would be affected if the road is narrowed from six lanes to four. The area studied will stretch from Oak Grove Avenue in Menlo Park to Redwood Avenue in Redwood City. Council members voted unanimously to approve the request for proposals, but only after making it clear that they want to study the overall issue of safety on El Camino, not just the possible lane reduction. They asked to have the name of the study changed to Phase I: El Camino Real Safety and Lane Reduction Traffic Study and asked Community Services Director Michael Kashiwagi to return with a phase two study that would look at the effects of other safety measures on El Camino including stop lights, crosswalk changes and turn restrictions. The study, Mayor Casy Wiest said, is a “step that we have to take, and it’s in the right direction, to increase safety and give us more information.” City Manager George Rodericks said the actual contract for the study will probably return to the council for approval in January. Mr. Kashiwagi’s report said that while 31,000 vehicles pass through Atherton on El Camino Real each day, there is only one signal at an El Camino intersection completely within the town boundaries. Pedestrians and bicyclists who wish to cross from one side of town to the other must use Atherton/Fair Oaks Avenue, where the traffic signal is, one of five other marked crosswalks, or the crosswalks with signals at either end of town in shared intersections. Go to tinyurl.com/ecr159 to see the staff report. A Photo by Natalia Nazarova Public officials gather at the Pulgas Water Temple site near Woodside to observe the arrival of the first drinking water to travel from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir through the new Bay Tunnel to Crystal Springs. Water from new tunnel reaches here By Barbara Wood Almanac Staff Writer E ighty years ago, the arrival of the first drinking water to make the long journey from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir in the Sierra Nevada to Crystal Springs Reservoir was greeted at the site of the Pulgas Water Temple off Canada Road north of Woodside by a crowd estimated at 20,000 people. On Wednesday, Oct. 15, a much smaller group met in the same place to greet the arrival of the first drinking water to travel from Hetch Hetchy to Crystal Springs via a newly completed Bay Tunnel, which goes under the San Francisco Bay. The new tunnel should make the water supply for the Peninsula and San Francisco much more likely to be available after a major earthquake, officials say. According to the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, the water system that serves San Francisco and the Peninsula was built in response to the 1906 earthquake and the devastat- ing fire that followed it. The completion of the system was celebrated on Oct. 28, 1934, at the water temple site. The classical temple that is now at that location had not yet been built, so a plywood mock-up stood nearby. The Loma Prieta earthquake, which happened 25 years ago on Oct. 17, was similarly the impetus for the Bay Tunnel and much of the other recent work that has been done to See TUNNEL, page 8 October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ5 N E W S Home burglar sentenced to prison for 33 years Justin Ralph Mitchell, 27, of Redwood City, who was convicted in June of two Woodside residential burglaries, was sentenced to 33 years in state prison on Friday, Oct. 17. Mr. Mitchell’s “crime spree” in October 2013 included two nighttime burglaries of occupied residences in Woodside, five commercial burglaries and several identity theft felonies, San Mateo County prosecutors said. A jury convicted him on 20 of 21 counts. According to a report from District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe, prosecutors had asked for 33 years, a sentence that Mr. Mitchell’s defense attorney, Michael Hroziencik, called “Draconian,” asking instead for 15 years and eight months. Mr. Hroziencik was not available for comment. Mr. Mitchell was on parole at the time of the burglaries, prosecutors said. His conviction added a “third strike” to his record, Chief Deputy District Attorney Karen Guidotti told the Almanac. Burglary of an occupied residence is considered a violent felony, which means that Mr. Mitchell will have to serve at least 85 percent of his sentence, Ms. Guidotti said. Mr. Mitchell had been in custody on $405,000 bail. His sentence included credit for 420 days of time served. Teen dies in I-280 incident The California Highway Patrol reported the death at about 12:45 p.m. on Oct. 14 of a 17-year-old Woodside girl who, witnesses said, jumped from the Sand Hill Road overpass at Interstate 280 and was struck by a vehicle driving north on the freeway. The San Mateo County Coroner’s Office identified the girl as Shelby Lauren Drazan. CHP officers were enroute to the scene after witnesses reported a girl standing on the guardrail of the westbound lanes of the overpass, Officer Art Montiel said. Medics pro- nounced the girl dead at the scene. The vehicle that struck the girl was a 2007 Toyota SUV driven by a Santa Clara resident. The driver was not injured, the CHP said. Officers rerouted northbound traffic via the off- and onramps at Sand Hill Road and traffic was backed up to just south of Alpine Road, the CHP said. The freeway section was reopened to traffic at about 2:55 p.m., the CHP said. The CHP is asking witnesses to contact Officer William Torr at (650) 369-6261. It’s my job to show you the options to consider when it comes to insuring your assets. Serving the community for over 25 years! CHARLIE PORTER Farmers® Agency License # 0773991 671-A Oak Grove Ave, Menlo Park 650-327-1313 • cporter2@farmersagent.com 6QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 N E W S Sweep nets 207 traffic citations, 93 in Menlo By Dave Boyce Almanac Staff Writer T wenty-two officers from around San Mateo County, most of them on motorcycles, made more than 240 traffic stops locally on Wednesday, Oct. 15, and issued 207 citations — 114 in the morning in East Palo Alto and 93 in the afternoon in Menlo Park, according to Cpl. Brett Murphy of the Burlingame Police Department. The top three citation categories: 58 tickets for talking on a hand-held cellphone, and 43 tickets each for driving without a seat belt and speeding, Cpl. Murphy said. The day of enforcement was the 10th such event in 2014, always held on the third Wednesday of the month. The communities receiving extra patrols change with each month. For October, the focus was Menlo Park and East Palo Alto. Menlo Park was also the focus in September, but was paired with Atherton. Woodside and Portola Valley were up in August. Other citations this time included 25 tickets for failure to stop at stop signs, 13 for road sign violations such as making an illegal right turn, eight for unlicensed driving, and three for driving on suspended licenses, Cpl. Murphy told the Almanac. Police made two arrests based on outstanding warrants, and two people were cited for possession of narcotics. Police also issued 10 tickets to bicyclists for not stopping at stop signs or red lights, nine of those in Menlo Park. Traffic violations by bicyclists were a particular focus because of the high volume of complaints to local police from residents about cyclists ignoring stop signs, Cpl. Murphy said. One person received a ticket for stopping in the vehicleexclusion zone marked on the pavement in front of the fire station at 3322 Alameda de las Pulgas, Station 4 of the Menlo Park Fire Protection District. That an officer was there to issue a ticket came about through complaints from firefighters to police about drivers ignoring the marked pavement, Cpl. Murphy said. The Saturation Traffic Enforcement Program (STEP) is a San Mateo County initiative, in effect since January 2013, that brings together for a day some 25 motorcycle officers, more or less, from law-enforcement agencies in the county. The Burlingame Police Department organizes the events. The purpose is to enforce the law and to educate drivers on the need to obey the law, Cpl. Murphy said. A Iverson’s ‘Capturing Grace’ wins honors at film festival “Capturing Grace” by Dave Iverson of Menlo Park was honored as the Audience Favorite Documentary at the 37th Mill Valley Film festival held Oct. 10-11. “It’s been exciting to have our film screened in front of a soldout audience, Mr. Iverson said, “and to now receive this award is both humbling and incredibly gratifying.” “Capturing Grace” documents a year in the life of a group of Parkinson’s disease patients in Brooklyn who are part of a dance therapy program offered by the Mark Morris Dance Group. Mr. Iverson had done a short piece about the program for the PBS News Hour, then decided the story would be worth a documentary. Several patients shared their life stories and their struggles. Mr. Iverson grew up in Menlo Park and attended Stanford University. He spent the bulk of his career in the Midwest after earning a graduate degree in telecommunications from Indiana University. He went on Iverson, David 2014 to have a successful career as a producer, writer and correspondent for public broadcasting. In 2004 he returned to the Bay Areaa and hosted Friday Forum for KQED until recently. “Capturing Grace” will also be shown on public television next April as part of Parkinson’s Disease Awareness Month. Atherton Mayors Say Why They SUPPORT Rose “From personal committee experience, Rose Hau offers thoughtful and sound judgment when dealing with town matters. She consistently demonstrated independent and objective reasoning when assessing difficult issues. Rose will be an excellent member of the Town Council.“ Jerry Carlson, former Atherton Mayor “Hau also would be a good choice for council as it embarks on the $30 million civic center and library project. Her professional experience would help the town avoid costly mistakes”. Daily Post 10-10-14 Endorsed By Jerry Carlson “I have known and worked with Rose Hau for the better part of two decades. Rose is independent, strong-minded, and fair, and speaks with her own voice, not that of any group or special interest. Rose listens to all sides and considers all the issues before reaching a decision. And when she has a position, she vigorously advocates for it. Rose represents the best of Atherton! Please vote for Rose Hau for Atherton Council!” Jim Janz, former Atherton Mayor “Rose and her family have lived in Atherton for twenty two years, their children have attended our local schools, she has served in leadership roles on our Planning Commission, our Audit Committee and our Civic Center Advisory Committee. She represents everything Atherton stands Malcolm Dudley for. She will be a superb council member. I unabashedly support Rose for Atherton Council.“ Malcolm Dudley, former Atherton Mayor Endorsed By SIX Former Atherton Mayors 20 Years of Atherton Town Service 20 Years of Independent Decision-Making 22 Year Resident of Atherton www.rose4council.com Support Local Business October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ7 N E W S Water from Bay Tunnel reaches Crystal Springs TUNNEL continued from page 5 improve the system bringing water from Hetch Hetchy to the Bay Area. The tunnel replaces two aging pipelines that sat on the bottom of the Bay. San Mateo County Supervisor Dave Pine was among the officials at the Oct. 15 ceremony, which followed a gush of water that sped through the water temple and down a culvert behind it to the reservoir. “San Mateo County has been pivotal to the water supply of San Francisco going back to 1852,” when the first water storage reservoir was built here, he said. Today, as scientists warn that another major earthquake could be imminent, the system is ready, he said, “This work was done ahead of” a possible disaster, he said. Nicole Sandkulla, CEO of the Bay Area Water Supply and Conservation Agency, said she was “happy and relieved to see this water from the Bay Tunnel.” “This is a project that will ensure a reliable supply ... through the future,” she said. The Bay Tunnel is just one part of the Hetch Hetchy Water System Improvement Program, with a $4.6 billion budget, primarily designed to assure water will still be available after an earthquake. The project also will develop new sources of groundwater and a supply of recycled water. A Support 7KH$OPDQDF·V print and online coverage of our community. -RLQWRGD\6XSSRUW/RFDO-RXUQDOLVPRUJ$OPDQDF TOWN OF PORTOLA VALLEY NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING ON A NEW PORTOLA ROAD CORRIDOR PLAN ELEMENT OF THE TOWN OF PORTOLA VALLEY GENERAL PLAN NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning Commission of the Town of Portola Valley will hold a public hearing on the draft Portola Road Corridor Plan Element of the Portola Valley General Plan on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 at 7:30 p.m., in the Town Council Chambers (Historic Schoolhouse), 765 Portola Road, Portola Valley, California. Copies of the draft Corridor Plan and related materials are available on the Town Website at www.portolavalley.net and at Portola Valley Town Hall, 765 Portola Road, Portola Valley, California. Comments may be submitted in writing prior to the Planning Commission meeting, and all interested persons are invited to appear before the Planning Commission to be heard at the time and place herein above mentioned. Public hearings provide the general public and interested parties an opportunity to provide testimony on these items. If you challenge a proposed action(s) in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at a Public Hearing(s) described above, or in written correspondence delivered to the Planning Commission at, or prior to, the public hearing(s). Dated: October 22, 2014 Signed: Karen Kristiansson, Deputy Town Planner 8QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 Photo by Natalia Nazarova Cool view The Ladera Recreation District pool on Andeta Way stays open until the end of October. Menlo conference: trafficking of women, girls A morning conference on the trafficking of women and girls will be held from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Nov. 1, at Trinity Church, 330 Ravenswood Ave. in Menlo Park. A panel of experts will include Carissa Phelps, who was trafficked at age 12 and is founder of Runaway Girl; David Batstone, co-founder of the Global antislavery organization, Not For Sale, and professor at the University of San Francisco; and the Rev. Becca Stevens, Episcopal priest and chaplain at Vanderbilt University and founder of Mag- MANDARIN continued from page 5 control of a program that would be draining resources from our kids.” But Ms. Cunningham said that because the charter school would require less money per pupil from the district than is currently spent educating each student, the district would not lose money as long as fewer than 50 percent of the charter students come from outside the district. “With the data that we know today, such as the district’s overenrollment situation, the financial impact will likely be inconsequential to beneficial,” she said. “These are still district kids that will need space, anyway.” The grounds on which the district board can make a decision on the charter school are limited by the state law, and some of the speakers tried to give the board dalene, residential communities of women who have survived trafficking, prostitution, and addiction. The morning will also feature a Shared Trade marketplace of global handmade home and body products. Local organizations that work in prevention and trafficking survivors will also be on site. Q B R I E F S Gov. Jerry Brown has signed a bill providing veterans with increased access to home-based assisted living care. Authored by Assemblyman Rich Gordon, D-Menlo Park, the bill creates a three-year medical foster home pilot program, which provides veterans the option to choose to live and receive care in a private home. Many California veterans seek home-based care rather than being institutionalized, Mr. Gordon said. The pilot program goes into effect on June 1, 2015. some of those reasons to use. One of the grounds is whether the school is likely to succeed in implementing the program outlined in its petition. “I do not think the charter will be successful if it does not have the support of our community,” said Caryn Wasserstein, a district parent. She and other parents started their own petition at Change.org in opposition to the school on Oct. 6 and by Oct. 14 had more than 1,000 signatures, she said. “The support of the community is just not there.” Arlina Ahluwalia said she supports the charter school. “We should embrace this group’s proposal,” she said. A similar program in Palo Alto has far more applicants than it has room for, and Menlo Park’s Spanish immersion program turns down two out of three applicants, Ms. Ahluwalia said. “Let the charter take a bunch of district kids off the district roster,” she said. “Don’t let doors close for our Menlo Park kids.” If the district board turns down the charter, backers may appeal to the county school board, and if that fails, to the state board of education. The district has scheduled a study session focusing on the charter proposal at 6 p.m. Monday, Oct. 27, in the district office’s TERC Building at 181 Encinal Ave. in Atherton. The board is scheduled to make its final decision on the proposal at a meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 12, in the same location. That meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. The districts has a list of frequently asked questions and answers on the proposal on its website, MPCSD.org, as well as a copy of the Menlo Mandarin Immersion School petition. Go to tinyurl.com/no656 to see the change.org petition against the charter. A New law establishes veterans’ program N E W S Mayor asks council to study public benefit thresholds By Sandy Brundage Almanac Staff Writer M ayor Ray Mueller said he would ask the rest of the Menlo Park council on Tuesday, Oct. 21, to schedule a study session on the public benefit thresholds of the downtown/El Camino Real specific plan. (Check AlmanacNews.com for updates. The meeting took place after the Almanac’s deadline.) During a review of three amendments proposed for the specific plan, the Planning Commission on Oct. 6 discussed how large a project should be before the developer is required to negotiate public benefits. Mr. Mueller was recused during the 2013 review of the specif- Q MEN LO PARK ic plan because he owned property within the plan’s boundaries at the time; it has since been sold. Several commissioners, including Vince Bressler, Katie Ferrick and John Kadvany, thought the topic needed review again after the council failed to recommend any changes to that aspect last fall, with Mr. Kadvany referring to the lack of action as “the biggest mistake” the council has made in recent years. Measure M, which is on the November ballot and would modify the specific plan, does not make any changes to the public benefit thresholds despite frequent criticism from the mea- sure’s supporters that too much development is allowed before public benefits must be negotiated. Of the two mixed-use projects currently proposed, one would meet the threshold and require public benefit negotiation — Greenheart’s proposal at 1300 El Camino Real. The other, Stanford’s proposal for 500 El Camino Real, would not meet the threshold, but the university is negotiating with the city anyway. According to the agenda, the meeting kicked off at 6 p.m. in council chambers at the Civic Center (701 Laurel St.) with a study session to consider installation of a new antenna for the city’s police and public works departments at the administration building. A Incumbent candidates comment on Greenheart’s campaign support By Sandy Brundage Almanac Staff Writer G reenheart’s quest to defeat Measure M, the specific plan initiative, during the November election has dug deep into the developer’s pockets — with about $200,000 earmarked for campaigning. The company has also made nonmonetary donations to the three council incumbents running for re-election, which raised questions about whether there’s a conflict of interest in accepting that support when Greenheart’s mixed-use project will need the council to sign off on the environmental impact report and public benefit negotiations. Incumbent Rich Cline, running for a third term, said Greenheart had asked if he wanted to have his campaign literature dropped off with its own, and to add his photo to “No on M” door hangers. He said yes. “I don’t view any funding or any support as any See GREENHEART, page 19 Should Portola Valley allow deputies to deploy license-plate-reading cameras? By Dave Boyce Almanac Staff Writer T he San Mateo County Sheriff ’s Office has placed automated license plate readers in Portola Valley on occasion, but they’ve been temporary. After a series of residential burglaries in late March, deputies — without informing Town Hall — placed cameras on vehiclespeed-monitoring trailers to look for a suspect vehicle. They did not find it. In June, deputies asked to deploy the cameras again and were denied pending a Town Council discussion with law enforcement authorities. That discussion is set to happen Wednesday, Oct. 22, in the Historic Schoolhouse at 765 Portola Road. The meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. Sheriff’s Office Captain Mike Sena, who directs the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (NCRIC), is expected to give a presentation. Mr. Sena met with a council subcommittee and the town attorney in September to “identify key issues of concern at the policy, legal, and logistical levels,” according to a staff report. The town has also invited representatives from American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, both of which are skeptical of indiscriminate data-storage practices employed by agencies using these cameras. NCRIC says it stores every plate photographed for one year. The “hit rate” — the percentage of license plates found to be of interest to police — is tiny, according to a 2013 ACLU analysis. In Maryland in 2012, only 0.2 percent of the total number of plates read were hits; of those, 97 percent were for vehicle registration or smog inspection problems, the ACLU says. The Minnesota State Patrol reported a hit rate of 0.05 percent over two years. NCRIC has policies to prevent abuse of the data, Mr. Sena said in response to emailed questions from Councilman Craig Hughes. Anyone using the database must provide “a lawful purpose” for accessing data and must agree to federal privacy policies, Mr. Sena says. The system also monitors user activities and NCRIC personnel periodically audit the process “to confirm that it is functioning properly,” he says. The San Carlos City Council didn’t buy it. By a 3-2 vote on Oct. 13, a majority rejected a proposal by its police chief to purchase one mobile and one fixed license plate reader, according to the San Jose Mercury News. The concern was the use and safeguarding of data collected by the cameras. ,WWDNHVWHDPZRUN [ I have never had anyone put in as much personal elbow grease as Steve. He has a wonderful team at his fingertips and can get a house beautifully ready in a hurry. With integrity, wisdom and no allergy to hard work, Steve is not a ‘surface’ realtor. He did the work it took to get our house sold. 30+ years of local knowledge. Born in Menlo Park. Raised in Atherton. A Woodside resident. [ 67(9(*5$< %5( VJUD\#FEQRUFDOFRP ADAM SILER ADAM GRADUATED FROM UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA WITH A B.A. IN PHILOSOPHY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE AND ALSO EARNED HIS M.ED IN PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION FROM STANFORD UNIVERSITY. As a Social Sciences teacher he helps prepare students live “authentic” lives by challenging and encouraging student’s personal and academic growth in critical thinking and empathy for others. He says, “At the end of the day, I want students to leave my classroom a little better prepared to call upon their capacity to think, a little better prepared to call upon their capacity to feel, and a little better prepared to help others do the same.” When Adam isn’t teaching he enjoys reading, walking his shih-tzu, and playing pickup basketball. ONE OF THE MANY REASONS TO SEND YOUR CHILD TO: Woodside Priory School Admissions Office 302 Portola Road, Portola Valley, CA 94028 650/851-8223 Q www.PrioryCa.org OPEN HOUSE For Prospective students and families Middle School Program (Grades Six to Eight): Saturday, December 6, 2014 - 10 AM Upper School Program (Grades Nine to Eleven): Saturday, December 6, 2014 - 2 PM For information and to R.S.V.P. contact Admissions at 650.851.8223 October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ9 N E W S Inspirations a guide to the spiritual community WOODSIDE VILLAGE CHURCH Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. with Sunday School and Nursery Care Pastor Mike Harvey Rev. Dorothy Straks 3154 Woodside Road Woodside 650.851.1587 www.wvchurch.org To include your Church in Inspirations Please email Blanca Yoc at byoc@paweekly.com or call 650-223-6596 TOWN OF WOODSIDE 2955 WOODSIDE ROAD WOODSIDE, CA 94062 INVITES APPLICATIONS FOR COMMITTEES ARTS AND CULTURE COMMITTEE Meets first Thursday of each month, 5:00 p.m.; appointed for two-year term The Committee strengthens multigenerational community involvement by initiating, sponsoring and celebrating local art, creativity and cultural activities including, but not limited to, the areas of art, photography, design, music, horticulture, culinary arts, literature, drama and dance. The Committee will create opportunities to educate, inform and engage the community about cultural affairs and will organize and supervise events to showcase local creative talent CIRCULATION COMMITTEE Meets third Thursday of each month, 7:30 p.m.; appointed for two-year term. The Committee supports the General Plan goal to balance circulation system user needs and works to foster a community of all users of the public roadway system, including motorists, bicyclists, pedestrians, and equestrians; works with the Town Engineer, Sheriff ’s Department and local and regional organizations to develop educational programs to promote traffic safety; advises staff and the Council about ways to make the roadway system safer for all users, to encourage effective traffic enforcement and to promote safe, convenient access to schools, Town businesses, public and private institutions and neighborhoods; reviews applications for special event permits for the Town’s roadways, offers expert participation on the C/CAG Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee and makes recommendations regarding grant applications that seek to improve the Town’s bicycle and pedestrian systems; confers with the Trails Committee on programs and recommendations of mutual interest. EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS COMMITTEE Meets second Wednesday of each month, 5:30 p.m.; appointed for two-year term. The Committee supports the General Plan Policies to institute or participate in education related to natural hazards and to support emergency preparedness education; works with Town staff to develop and maintain appropriate plans and procedures for responding to disasters, including wildfires, earthquakes, flood and other emergencies; supports the work of the Citizens’ Emergency Response and Preparedness Program (CERPP) to develop a network of volunteers to respond to emergencies at the neighborhood level; works with staff to recruit, organize, train and maintain a team of volunteers who can assist staffing an Emergency Operations Center when Town staff is partially or wholly unavailable; works with staff to develop emergency communication facilities and capabilities and to provide residents of the Town with information and training in emergency topics. OPEN SPACE COMMITTEE Meets fourth Thursday of each month, 5:30 p.m.; appointed for two-year term. The Committee advises and assists the Town Council, Planning Commission and staff in implementing the policies and goals of the Open Space and Conservation elements of the General Plan, specifically with respect to acquisition and maintenance of conservation easements and open space preservation. RECREATION COMMITTEE Meets first Thursday of each month, 7:30 p.m.; appointed for three-year term. The Committee guides the activities of the community recreation programs. SUSTAINABILITY AND CONSERVATION COMMITTEE Meets fourth Monday of each month, 6:00 p.m.; appointed for two-year term. The Committee advises and assists the Town Council, Planning Commission, and staff on conservation, open space, noise, public services and facilities as pertaining to the elements of the Town’s General Plan. WOODSIDE HISTORY COMMITTEE Meets second Thursday of each month, 10:00 a.m.; appointed for two-year term. The Committee advises the Town Council and staff regarding actions, policies and plans relating to historic preservation. Committees are volunteer positions and serve in an advisory capacity to the Town Council. Interested residents may request information and applications Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m.-12 noon and 1-5:00 p.m., from the Town Clerk’s Office at Town Hall, 2955 Woodside Road, or telephone (650) 851-6790, or through the Town’s web site at www.woodsidetown.org. Vacancies are open until appointments are filled. 10QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 New laws aim to level playing field for LGBT community members Two bills by Assemblyman Rich Gordon, D-Menlo Park, to improve healthcare and economic opportunities for the LGBT community have been signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown. The two bills were among 17 authored in 2014 by Mr. Gordon that passed in both houses of the state Legislature and received the governor’s signature. t c e l E Re The signing of AB 496 establishes a task force to report to the Legislature on LGBT cultural competency among healthcare providers and requires them to become familiar with LGBT healthcare issues. Studies have shown that the social and health challenges of the LGBT community are unique, and that discussion of those challenges by healthcare Peter OHTAKI Menlo Park CITY COUNCIL PeterOhtaki.com Paid for by Ohtaki for MP City Council 2014 FPPC# 1369351 providers would improve the level of care, according to a legislative analysis. “Understanding a patient’s unique needs and background is crucial to providing comprehensive and individualized health care,” Mr. Gordon said. The other key bill on LGBT issues, AB 1678, is meant to provide economic growth opportunities for certified LGBT business owners. Under current law, public utilities with annual revenues of more than $25 million must submit “detailed and verifiable” plans to the Public Utilities Commission that encourage contracting with enterprises owned by minorities, women or disabled veterans. The new law adds LGBT-owned enterprises to this list, Mr. Gordon said. “Not only does this legislation establish equity for LGBT business owners, but it generates opportunities, spurring continued recovery and economic growth throughout California,” Mr. Gordon said. Other bills Mr. Gordon had a good legislative session in 2014 if the measure is having one’s bills pass both houses and be signed into law. Among the 17 bills he authored that were signed into law are: Q AB 800, which adds transparency to reporting of late expenditures in election campaigns. It also expands the realm of candidate records subject to investigation by the Fair Political Practices Commission and the Franchise Tax Board, including an option to compel expedited disclosure. The vote was on party lines in both houses. Q AB 1624, which extends until 2020 incentives to encourage residents to participate in the self-generated energy program, with rebates for renewable energy and clean combustion processes. Q AB 2351, which improves chances for smaller political parties, such as Peace & Freedom, Libertarian and Green, to remain qualified to appear on the ballot. The legislation addresses imbalances created by the 2009 “top two” primary election system, in which only the top two vote-getters advance to the general election. Q AB 2193, which cuts red tape for local governments and property owners trying to restore ecological health to urban and rural lands. — Tiffany Lam and Dave Boyce contributed to this story. Measure M is a Mistake Measure M Is Opposed By The Entire Menlo Park City Council “Our families deserve to enjoy an El Camino Real corridor that is free of vacant lots, free of blight and is not crumbling in decay. Measure M will delay those improvements for years. It’s time to move forward. Please vote no on Measure M.” “Measure M doesn’t limit the size of any project, it just limits the office space and allows that to be replaced by more retail, bigger residential units or medical offices. So the net result is higher traffic and bigger burden on our schools.” “Currently, the city has the ability to change zoning for downtown at any time, but this initiative takes away that ability and locks us in. Measure M puts us at a real disadvantage relative to our neighboring cities.” Ray Mueller Catherine Carlton Rich Cline Mayor, Menlo Park Vice Mayor, Menlo Park Former Mayor “The current plan has been thoroughly vetted. I have concerns that if M passes, it could lead to high traffic medical offices replacing the current proposals, which have no medical, leading to much more traffic.” NO ON MEASURE “We have the opportunity to create a tech village near Caltrain that would bring vibrancy and new customers to our downtown. Measure M’s limit on office space will squash that opportunity.” Kirsten Keith Peter Ohtaki Former Mayor Former Mayor M For More No On Measure M Endorsements go to www.MenloParkDeservesBetter.org or www.mpcdforum.com Paid for by Committee for a Vibrant Downtown No on M With Major Funding by Greenheart Land Company 68 Willow Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, FPPC ID# 1369207 October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ11 Thank you for making the DeLeon Team #1 in Silicon Valley and #5 in the Nation. * Wa l l S t re e t J o u r n a l / R e a l Tre n d s (650) 488-7325 | www.deleonrealty.com | CalBRE #01903224 12QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 DELEON REALTY Call DeLeon Realty for more information on listing your home with us! We offer staging, property inspection, pest inspection, and more. Staging includes design, installation, 1 month of furniture rental, and removal. 6 5 0 . 4 8 8 . 7 3 2 5 | w w w. d e l e o n r e a l t y. c o m | C a l B R E # 0 1 9 0 3 2 2 4 October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ13 N E W S THE BOOK CARREL We Buy Fine & Rare Books From Estates & Individuals 650-557-5575 www.bookcarrel.com 24/7 On Call Home Care Experts Today’s local news and hot picks Sign up today at AlmanacNews.com Let us help your loved ones retain their pride, dignity and independence with our full-service home care. ȧ%DWKLQJGUHVVLQJJURRPLQJWRLOHWLQJ ȧ/LJKWKRXVHNHHSLQJPHDOSUHSDUDWLRQ ȧ7UDQVSRUWDWLRQVKRSSLQJHUUDQGV ȧ0HGLFDWLRQUHPLQGHUVSK\VLFDODFWLYLWLHV ȧ&RPSDQLRQVKLSPRUH $1000 off ˉUVWPRQWKRI OLYHLQVHUYLFH *must have 1 month of service offer expires 10/31/14 YOUR 24/7 HOME CARE SPECIALIST (650) 328-1001 www.careindeed.com 1150 Chestnut St. Menlo Park, CA 94025 BEST HOME CARE FOR LE$$! Voter info available to candidates, journalists By Tiffany Lam Special to the Almanac I t may come as a surprise to voters that much of the information they provide when they register to vote — including name, party affiliation, address and whether they voted — can be legally obtained by candidates and ballot measure committees, as well as scholars and journalists. In a recent seminar for candidates and campaign committees, Hillary O’Connor, elections specialist for San Mateo County, explained how to get and use voter data. Applicants for the information must state their purpose for wanting the information. Those with a “political, governmental, journalist or scholarly” purpose, for example, can obtain the information, according to the county elections website. For $125, an applicant can obtain data for all active voters in a voting district, such as school district or even the whole county. The information includes voter contact data (address and phone number), voting history (whether a person voted, not how the person voted) for the past five elections, and party affiliation, said Ms. O’Connor. Applicants can also get a printed list of voter information for 50 cents per 1,000 voters. The information is commonly used by candidates and election committees to contact voters See VOTER DATA, page 15 END OF THE SEASON SALE UP TO 50% OFF Expires 10/31/14 THE CLIMATE CONVERSATION YOU HAVEN’T HEARD Moderator Lesley Stahl Many of us don’t want to talk or think about it, but extreme weather and a changing planet are a given for the 21st century. It’s a daunting problem — however, developing new techniques and technologies to deal with global problems is at the heart of what Stanford and Silicon Valley do best. Join moderator Lesley Stahl and a panel of global leaders to address what may be the most compelling issue of our time. Friday, October 24, 2014 Maples Pavilion, Stanford University 9:30 a.m. President’s Welcome / 10 a.m. Roundtable Free and open to the public. terrapatio.com Mountain View Store 1064 W. El Camino Real (Located between Castro St. & Shoreline on El Camino) 10 - 6 Everyday , media partner roundtable.stanford.edu 14QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 650.969.2200 N E W S Phyllis Van De Mark, former Lions Club president Phyllis Havens Van De Mark died Sept. 29 at the age of 87. A resident of Corte Madera since 2012, she lived Phyllis Van De in Menlo Park Mark for 51 years and served multiple terms as president of the Menlo Park Live Oak Lions Club. Ms. Van De Mark grew up in Chicago and graduated from Ripon College. While living in Menlo Park, she worked for SRI and taught chemistry at West Valley and Ohlone community colleges and San Jose State University. She volunteered with Westwind 4-H Riding for the Handicapped program and helped start and maintain the Menlo Park farmers’ market. Her happiest times began when she turned 50 and married her neighbor, Raymond Van De Mark, say family members. Ms. Van De Mark is survived by her sister, Elizabeth Heininger; niece Diane Heininger; and Diane’s husband, Chris White. Donations in her memory may VOTER DATA continued from page 14 by phone and by door-to-door canvassing. The campaign staffs want to contact people who are likely to vote and likely to vote for their candidate or ballot measure. Journalists may not publish confidential information, which is outlined in the application, and may only use the data for statistical reporting with no reference to particular voters, Ms. O’Connor said. The law prohibits commercial use of voter registration information. Driver’s license and Social Security numbers, and signatures cannot be released. Go to shapethefuture.org and click on the link, “Candidates & Campaigns,” then “Voter File Information,” for more information. A New CFO at Sequoia Hospital Kim Osborne is the new chief financial office/vice president of finance at Dignity Health Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City. Ms. Osborne served for more than three years as chief financial officer for Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage and seven years as vice president and controller for Stanford Health Care, formerly known as Stanford Hospital and Clinics. Q O BIT UAR IES be made to the Westwind Riding Institute (for the Westwind 4-H Riding for the Handicapped program) and the Menlo Park Live Oak Lions Club. Wiley Thomas Birkhofer English teacher and artist Wiley Thomas Birkhofer, who grew up in Menlo Park, died Sept. 30 at the age of 27. Mr. Birkhofer attended Oak Knoll and Menlo Schools. He flourished in academics and sports, especially basWiley Thomas ketball, soccer Birkhofer and lacrosse, say family members. He was an avid skier and surfer. After graduating from Stanford University in 2009, he completed his master’s of fine arts in creative degree (poetry) at New York University in 2014. He recently taught at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City and was planning to teach creative arts to underserved children through Community-Word Project in the New York City school system. He previously taught at Sacred Heart School on Maui, the Boys & Girls Club, and undergraduate writing and poetry courses at NYU. His passion for creating art and music grew while he was living in New York City, say family members. He made a lasting positive impression on many people and deeply loved his family and countless friends, they say. He is survived by his parents Wendell and Celeste Birkhofer; sister Elise Birkhofer; grandfather G. Wendell Birkhofer; and 10 aunts and uncles Donations may be made in his memory to the National Alliance on Mental Illness (na mica lifornia.org) or Community-World Project (communityworldproject.org) Continue to push boundaries October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month The best way to fight breast cancer is to have a plan that helps you detect the disease in its early stages. Stanford Medicine physicians and researchers have been instrumental in developing leading technologies to understand and screen for hereditary cancer syndromes. Stanford Women’s Cancer Center physicians are pushing the boundaries to better identify breast cancer and to offer advances in screening, diagnosis and treatment. For more information, call 650.498.6004 or visit stanfordhealthcare.org/breastcancer October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ15 N E W S Earthquake! Atherton gets ready for a big one By Barbara Wood Almanac Staff Writer I t has been 25 years since the Loma Prieta earthquake shook the Bay Area with a 6.9 intensity jolt, resulting in 63 deaths, buckled bridges, collapsed freeways, cracked foundations, fallen facades and power and phone outages affecting millions — long enough to forget the damage an earthquake can cause. But scientists are now warning that another major quake is almost certain to hit California some time in the next 30 years. Atherton wants to be ready for that inevitable quake, and on Oct. 16, a day before the Loma Prieta anniversary, the town and the Lindenwood neighborhood each tested their readiness with an earthquake response drill. In Lindenwood, Wally Sleeth, with the help of Scott Barnum from ADAPT (Atherton Disaster and Preparedness Team) organized at least 45 neighbors to do what will be needed in a major disaster. Teams went door-to-door checking on their neighbors, reporting back to their staging point via ham radio or in written reports ferried back and forth by Phil Lively and Marion Oster in Mr. Lively’s 1945 Willys Jeep. One of the town’s three mobile supply trailers, packed with everything needed to set up an emergency response — from hard hats and tools to radio gear and a generator, plus food and water — was towed to the staging point. The exercise was made all the more realistic because Lindenwood neighbors were told in advance about the drill and given roles to play, reporting problems including a heart attack, downed trees, gas leaks, minor injuries and downed power lines. Menlo Park Fire Protection District director and Lindenwood resident Peter Carpenter praised the participants for their efforts to prepare for a disaster. “You won’t be standing around waiting for someone to tell you what to do” when a disaster strikes, he said, “because you know what to do.” Manny Navarro, division chief for the fire district, told the residents that in a major disaster, local emergency responders may Photo by Barbara Wood/The Almanac Wally Sleeth, center, explains to Lindenwood volunteers who took part in an earthquake drill on Oct. 16 what they will be expected to do in a major disaster when first responders are busy elsewhere. be too busy to immediately help out. “It’s extremely important that you gather like this and do what you can in a major event,” he said. -05,,<967,(5-<950;<9, (5++,*69(;0=,(9;: Across town, City Council members and city staff members were gathered in the town’s historic council chambers on Thursday morning when lights 79,=0,> 6J[VILY 058<090,: QLMMYL`ZTP[O'IVUOHTZJVT 4VUKH`6J[VILYHT :HU-YHUJPZJV (.,69.,07(9*,3.03; >(35<;:,*9,;(9@ NjYZ[X\HY[LY[OJLU[\Y` $8,000 - 12,000 (50;(30(5)(968<, ,5.9(=,+)65,(5+ :/,33053(0+7(05; +,*69(;,+,)650A,+ >(35<;*()05,; 65:;(5+ NjYZ[OHSM[OJLU[\Y` $3,000 - 5,000 (-9,5*/.03;)965A,(5+ :=9,::;@3,769*,3(05 46<5;,+;9073,:05.05. )09+(<;64(;65 )VU[LTZ7HYPZ SH[L [OJLU[\Y` $5,000 - 7,000 (=,9@-05,-9,5*/>(35<; *,5;,9;()3,+,70*;05.;/, (4,90*(: SH[L [OJLU[\Y` $2,000 - 3,000 f lickered and the building shook, or so it seemed. They did what they had been trained to do — drop to the floor, find cover and hold on. (5(4,90*(5.63+(5+ 8<(9;A/,(+,+*(5,(5+( .63+/,(+,+*(5, WYLZLU[LK[V[OL+VSSHYMHTPS`*HSPMVYUPH NjYZ[X\HY[LY[OJLU[\Y` $4,000 - 6,000 (-05,9,.,5*,.03;)965A, 46<5;,+205.>66+(5+ 96:,>66+7(98<,;9@ *6446+, NjYZ[X\HY[LY[OJLU[\Y` $20,00 - 30,000 )LPUNZVSK[VILULNj[[OL-PUL(Y[Z 4\ZL\TZVM:HU-YHUJPZJV bonhams.com/furniture k%RQKDPV%XWWHUųHOGV$XFWLRQHHUV&RUS$OOULJKWVUHVHUYHG%RQG1R%6%*/ 16QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 N E W S Then they hurried over to the town offices that serve as the Emergency Operations Center to deal with the aftermath. The scenario was a magnitude 5.8 earthquake on the northwest fork of the San Jose Fault, which runs through the town, much of it under El Camino Real. The fault has not moved in 1.6 million years, but as with all earthquake faults, is unpredictable. Participants from all the town’s departments had roles in the drill, which was designed to test their training and preparation, and to give them an idea of additional work that needs to be done. Through the morning, drill participants were bombarded with new emergencies: El Camino was buckled and closed, a home collapsed, trees blocked streets, a fire required a neighborhood evacuation, a police officer was injured while checking on the status of a small local dam, and a truck spilled hazardous materials. Drill participants figured out how they might respond, seek outside help, communicate and cope. The first thing learned was that the key to the town’s emergency supply cache needs to be better marked. At the end of the drill it was apparent the room available as an operations center in the town’s most seismically up-to-date building is far too small and ill-equipped for an actual emergency. Police Chief Ed Flint, who served as public information officer for the drill, said more practice is needed. “If we do this frequently enough, it becomes second nature,” he said. Atherton residents who are inspired to join their town’s efforts at emergency preparedness can take the advice of ADAPT’s Scott Barnum: Q Go to getreadyAtherton. org — the ADAPT website — to check out the resource links and learn how to prepare for an emergency. Q Take a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT)] training class from the Menlo Park Fire Protection District. Q Get involved in your neighborhood’s response and preparedness through ADAPT and CERT. A Photo by Natalia Nazarova Paul Jemelian uses a ham radio to transmit information during the drill. October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ17 C O M M U N I T Y The Girls’ Middle School :HVW%D\VKRUH5RDGǮ3DOR$OWR&$ 1RUWK5HQJVWRUȬ$YHǮ0RXQWDLQ9LHZ&$ [ǮZZZJLUOVPVRUJ [ǮZZZJLUOVPVRUJ DGPLVVLRQV#JLUOVPVRUJ admissions@girlsms.org OPEN HOUSES 23(1+286(6 OPEN HOUSE 6DWXUGD\ Saturday, Sunday 2FWREHUǣSP November 14, 1 pm December 6XQGD\ 7 Thursday, 'HFHPEHUǣSP 1-4pm December 10, 7 pm IGNITING THE SPARK OF KNOWLEDGE AND SELF-DISCOVERY Book sale Saturday at Woodside Library The Friends of the Woodside Library will hold a book sale on Saturday, Oct. 25, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the library, 3140 Woodside Road. The Friends’ Margaret MacNiven said this yearís selection includes children’s books, art and coffee table books, leather bound classics, a herd of horse books, bibles, foreign language books and dictionaries (French, Spanish, German and Italian), and cook books, many in pristine condition. Also, CDs and DVDs will be for sale. Prices are 50 cents for paperbacks, $2 for hardcovers and $1 for CDs and DVDs. Special books will be individually priced. Proceeds benefit the Friends organization, which sponsors the library’s children’s programs, provides computer sup- Q ARO U N D TOW N port, and supplements the book, video and audio collections. While there is usually no parking on Woodside Road, parking restriction will be lifted on the south side of the road across from the library during the sale. For more information, call the library at 851-0147. Ty Cobb event Herschel Cobb, Menlo Park resident and author of the memoir, “Heart of a Tiger: Growing up with My Grandfather, Ty Cobb,” will speak at 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 1, at the Menlo Park City Council chambers at 701 Laurel St. in the Menlo Park Civic Center. The public is invited to this free event on the legendary baseball player. Refreshments will be provided by the Friends of the Menlo Park Library. Call 330-2501 for more information. Morgan Stanley Scott Rash, managing director of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s Menlo Park complex, and Lindsay Romig, vice president, presented a check for $10,000 to the MidPeninsula Boys & Girls Club, based in San Mateo, in a ceremony on Sept. 18. The complex was awarded grant money after its employees were named top participants in the firm’s Global Volunteer Month. Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s complex is at 2882 and 3000 Sand Hill Road. Richard Joseph Kusa March 1, 1927 — October 5, 2014 It’s with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Richard (Dick) Joseph Kusa on October 5, 2014. Dick was a native of Ohio, born March 1, 1927, in Cleveland, Ohio. He later moved to Menlo Park, California (God’s Country as he would call it). He attended Ohio University and played both baseball and ice hockey. After college he enlisted and served in the Navy. Dick was a loyal family man who lived life to the fullest and was an avid San Francisco fan (49ers, Giants, and all Stanford sports). He was such an avid fan that he passed on his favorite day of the week, NFL Sunday. When not watching sports he was an avid golfer. Dick was best known for his smile and his ability to talk to anyone around him. He could make you laugh with his jokes and make you feel like you had known him for years. Even at his young age of 87, Dick would meet his friends at the “Goose” every week for deviled eggs, burgers and a beer. He would spend every Thanksgiving in Atlanta with his daughter and her husband, and was such a regular they had the NFL package ordered so he wouldn’t miss a 49er game. He was never a sad man and would not like those around him to be sad with his passing. Instead, every time you have cocktails, think of Dick; every time you watch football, think of Dick; every time you listen to Frank Sinatra, think of Dick. Dick had quite a great ride in life and left a great impression on many because of it. Dick leaves behind a loving wife Elna; a daughter, Kyle Kusa-Henry; son-in-law Stuart’ stepson Mike Doyle; step-daughters Kathleen Doyle, Cindy Walker and Shelia Doyle; five grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; and way too many friends to list here. Dick will be deeply missed but his image and his impact on those around him will live on forever. PA I D 18QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 O B I T U A RY N E W S GREENHEART continued from page 9 connection to the job. I have had lots of resident political action committees support me and I received funding from them, but even if they wanted me to, I did not vote because of that support. I vote on the data in hand, the moment in time and the collective community feedback. Nothing will alter that approach.” Mr. Cline, who tends to be at the rear of the pack in terms of campaign fundraising, said that was deliberate. “Money does not win Menlo Park elections. This community knows better,” he said. Saying he’s sensitive to the concern about a conflict of interest, he noted that his past campaigns also saw literature distributed in the same way with no collaboration or interaction. “I think my record speaks for itself — no special interest has ever influenced any vote at any time. I did not take any cash contribution at any time. I do this for the love of my community, not for the glory of being on City Council in a 35,000-person town.” Fellow incumbent Peter Ohtaki also declined any monetary support, limiting Greenheart’s efforts to assistance with two mailers and some distribution of fliers. “Volunteers and I have distributed most of my fliers around town,” he commented. Mr. Ohtaki described the nonmonetary contribution as “not significant” in his overall campaign budget. He said he would, however, decline any contribution from Stanford, which also has a contentious mixed-use proposal currently under negotiation with the council, because it “is so controversial.” Kirsten Keith, who along with Mr. Ohtaki is running for a second term, said Greenheart’s efforts are “completely independent” of her campaign. Support Local Business The online guide to Menlo Park businesses ShopMenloPark.com “No candidate has control over independent expenditures.” She said that whatever someone contributes has absolutely no influence on how she votes as a council member. “I will always vote in a manner that I think is in the best interest of Menlo Park. I always have voted this way, and I always will. I have agreed and disagreed with people who have supported me in the past, and that will continue to be the case.” As for any conflict of interest, she said there is none. “Many people and groups con- tribute to candidates who they support. I have disagreed and agreed with people who have contributed to my campaign. I supported pension reform when I ran in 2010 and a few unions have now contributed to my campaign.” The Greenheart campaign finance filing of Oct. 7 reports that the “nonmonetary” spending for the candidates were for “slate cards” and “carrying campaign literature door to door” at these costs to the Greenheart committee: $992 for Mr. Cline, $867 for Ms. Keith, and $992 for Mr. Ohtaki. RUTH CATHERINE BENTLEY August 26, 1929 – October 13, 2014 Ruth Catherine Bentley, beloved and cherished wife of John Bentley for 63 years, and phenomenal mother of 6 children, passed away peacefully on October 13, 2014. She was surrounded by John, her husband, and their 6 children. Ruth was born in Palo Alto, CA on August 26, 1929 to the late James Henry and Ruth Catherine Marshel (Simpkin). She was one of four children; her late sisters, Dorothy Marshel, Doris Starbody, and her late brother, James Marshel. Ruth attended St. Monica’s Grammar School followed by Presentation High School in San Francisco. While at Presentation High School she met her husband, John M. Bentley, where they attended her senior prom together and fell in love. Married at old Saint Mary’s Catholic Church in San Francisco’s Chinatown on November 17, 1951, John and Ruth enjoyed almost 63 years of marriage. Ruth initially worked as a secretary and was recognized with a PHT (Putting Husband Through) certificate in June of 1955 from USF School of Law after the birth of their first child. In 1964 the family moved to Menlo Park in San Mateo County, where they remained. While raising her family, Ruth was active in the WoodsideAtherton Auxiliary, benefitting Packard Children’s Hospital and was a member and past president of the St. Raymond’s Mothers Club. She also enjoyed being a volunteer with the WoodsideAtherton Auxiliary at Allied Arts in Menlo Park. Always ready with a contagious smile, her entertaining sense of humor and charm won the hearts of many. Ruth loved interior design and had a knack for flawless style. Even battling serious health issues and challenges in the last several years, Ruth will be remembered for demonstrating elegance, poise and grace throughout her life. She cherished her family, to whom she showed unwavering love and dedication. Ruth adored her role as a dedicated wife, devoted mother, and caring grandmother and committed to this with the utmost warmth and compassion. Her biggest joy was shepherding and guiding her children into the world and watching them achieve adulthood and success with their families, and in their chosen fields. She is survived by her beloved husband, John M. Bentley, six devoted children and their spouses; John Bentley Jr. (Patti), Julie Bentley Winder (Peter), Jim Bentley (Pam), Joe Bentley (Ashlee), Josh Bentley (Emily), and Mark Bentley (Sheri), and her grandchildren; Marshel, Rachael, John III, Kaitlin, Olivia, Will, Kate, Luke and Luci Bentley, and step grandchildren; Emily See-Winder, P.J., Kim and Alan Winder, Paige Fiander, and Angela and Milan Florez. The family is deeply grateful for the outpouring of love and prayers and support by those who knew and loved her. Her gift of joy will never be forgotten. We are honored by this beautiful life well lived. Ruth will be interred at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma beside her mother-in-law and father-in-law, Daisie and Mark Bentley. Private funeral mass and services will be held. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Cristo Rey San Jose Jesuit High School, 1390 Five Wounds Lane San José, CA 95116 or St Anthony’s Padua Dining Room, 3500 Middlefield Rd, Menlo Park, CA 94025 (paduadiningroom.com). PA I D O B I T U A RY Phyllis Havens Van De Mark January 19, 1927 — September 29, 2014 Phyllis Van De Mark passed away on Sept. 29. Though she resided in Corte Madera since 2012, her real home of 51 years was Menlo Park. While living here she worked for SRI, received her Master’s in Chemistry from San Jose State, taught Chemistry at West Valley, Ohlone, & San Jose State, volunteered with the Westwind 4-H Riding for the Handicapped Program, helped start and maintain the Menlo Park Farmers Market, and served multiple terms as President of the Menlo Park Live Oak Lions Club. Her happiest times began when she turned 50 and married her neighbor, Raymond Van De Mark. They travelled extensively in the U.S. & abroad but loved returning to their home and friends in Menlo Park. Phyllis grew up in Chicago, got her Biology degree from Ripon College, worked for the University of Chicago, then headed to California for research work at UCLA. In the late 50’s, she became a year-round employee of the Grand Teton Lodge Company, spending summers at Jackson Lake Lodge in Grand Teton National Park and winters in San Francisco. Always adventurous and independent (she climbed the Grand Teton more than once and made her last solo drive to Wyoming at 78), she decided Menlo Park was where she wanted to live and bought her home there as a “single woman” in 1961. Phyllis is survived by her sister, Elizabeth Heininger, her niece, Diane Heininger, Diane’s husband, Chris White, and cousins. Donations in Phyllis’s memory may be made to the Westwind Riding Institute (for the Westwind 4-H Riding for the Handicapped Program) Westwind Riding Institute, 27210 Altamont Rd., Los Altos Hills, CA 94022 and the Menlo Park Live Oak Lions Club, Menlo Park Live Oak Lions Club, P.O. Box U, Menlo Park, CA 94026 http://westwind4h.org/about/get-involved/support/ PA I D O B I T U A RY Virginia Nell Hart Johnston Passed away July 30, 2014 at Stanford Hospital at the age of 83. She was born March 13, 1931 to Robert Netherland and Virginia Piers Wathen Hart in Miami Beach, Florida. She is survived by her loving husband Clint; daughters Ginger Bamford, Judy Johnston and May Borello and beloved grandchildren Holden, Charles and James Bamford; Sophia and Mira Borello. Ginny grew up in Louisville, Kentucky and majored in art history at the University of Louisville. She loved to dance and enjoyed teaching others. Her dance training began at age 3 with ballet. Ballroom dance training commenced at age 10. At 17 she assumed responsibility for teaching all classes. She continued taking lessons and teaching all her life. In 1988 she formed a senior dance troupe that performed at retirement homes, hospitals, churches and civic events. She taught the dances, choreographed some and designed most costumes. Ginny met her husband, Clint when they were both 17 years old and attending the University of Louisville. Clint visited one of her ballroom dance classes and quickly became enamored of ballroom dancing and Ginny in particular. He soon was helping her teach classes and continued to share their enjoyment of dance the rest of their lives. Ginny was a very kind and loving person. She was beautiful, very intelligent and creative (flower arranging, oil painting and jewelry designing) excelling in most endeavors. She was president of most organizations she joined. These included garden clubs, art museums, theatres, newcomers and Peninsula Volunteers among others. Memorial donations to Peninsula Volunteers will be appreciated (800 Middle Avenue, Menlo Park 94025 (650) 326-0665) in lieu of flowers. A celebration of Ginny’s Life will take place on Saturday, November 8, 2014 at 2pm to 4pm at Gordon Manor, 1616 Gordon St., Redwood City, CA 94061 (650) 562-0555. ½ Block off Woodside Road. A few blocks East of Alameda De Las Pulgas. Please email cjdanceswithvj@yahoo. com if you are coming will be helpful. PAID O BITUARY October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ19 Extraordinary Care for a Legendary Loved One 9 out of 10 seniors prefer to age in the comfort of their own homes where they spent so much time creating fond memories. Now is your chance to help your aging loved one stay where he or she wants with the help of a top quality caregiver. Our extensively trained, experienced caregivers provide quality care that promotes greater independence, health and well-being for our clients. Call us today to learn how we can help your family! Do you have a living legend in your life you would like to celebrate? Tell his or her story using #honoryourlivinglegend or email honor@homecareassistance.com. Your loved one may be featured on our website or Facebook page! Select stories will be chosen to win a prize valued between $50 to $1000 Let us help you honor your living legend! HonorYourLivingLegend.com • #HonorYourLivingLegend To me, he is a living legend. Dad is our hero and taught us how to live life to the fullest! Now it’s our turn to ensure he does the same. 20QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 650-462-6900 148 Hawthorne Ave, Palo Alto, CA www.HomeCareAssistance.com Serving Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley, and Woodside for 49 years. Viewpoint IDEAS, THOUGHTS AND OPINIONS ABOUT LOCAL ISSUES NEWSROOM Editor Richard Hine (223-6525) Associate Editor Renee Batti (223-6528) Proposition 2: Fiscal fitness run amok Lifestyles Editor Jane Knoerle By Jennifer Bestor Staff Writers Dave Boyce (223-6527), Sandy Brundage (223-6529), Barbara Wood (223-6533) Contributors Marjorie Mader, Kate Daly Special Sections Editor Carol Blitzer (223-6511) Photographer Michelle Le (223-6530) DESIGN & PRODUCTION Marketing and Creative Director Shannon Corey (223-6560) Design and Production Manager Lili Cao (223-6562) Designers Linda Atilano, Colleen Hench, Rosanna Leung, Paul Llewellyn ADVERTISING Vice President Sales and Marketing Tom Zahiralis (223-6570) Real Estate Manager Neal Fine (223-6583) Real Estate & Advertising Coordinator Diane Martin (223-6584) Legal Advertising Alicia Santillan (223-6578) ADVERTISING SERVICES Advertising Services Manager Jennifer Lindberg (223-6595) Sales & Production Coordinators Dorothy Hassett (223-6597), Blanca Yoc (223-6596) Published every Wednesday at 3525 Alameda De Las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA 94025 Newsroom: (650) 223-6525 Newsroom Fax: (650) 223-7525 Advertising: (650) 854-2626 Advertising Fax: (650) 223-7570 Email news and photos with captions to: Editor@AlmanacNews.com Email letters to: letters@AlmanacNews.com The Almanac, established in October 1965, is delivered each week to residents of Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley and Woodside and adjacent unincorporated areas of southern San Mateo County. The Almanac is qualified by decree of the Superior Court of San Mateo County to publish public notices of a governmental and legal nature, as stated in Decree No. 147530, issued December 21, 1969. ©2014 by Embarcadero Media. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are $60 for one year and $100 for two years. Go to AlmanacNews.com/circulation. Q WHAT’S YOUR VIEW? All letters must include a home address and contact phone number. Published letters will also appear on the web site, www.TheAlmanacOnline.com, and occasionally on the Town Square forum. Town Square forum Post your views on the Town Square forum at AlmanacNews.com Email your views to: letters@almanacnews.com and note this it is a letter to the editor in the subject line. Mail or deliver to: Editor, The Almanac 3525 Alameda de las Pulgas Menlo Park, CA 94025 Call the Viewpoint desk at 223-6528. Menlo Park City Elementary, for example, gets about $13 million twice a year, and carries about $15 million forward on June 30. This he governor’s revised “rainy day fund” in Proposition 2 may gives it a 6 percent reserve ($2 million) plus property tax funding improve the state’s fiscal fitness regimen, but it has become for July 1 through Dec. 20. Las Lomitas behaves similarly; Sequoia simply too risky for our local schools. It now threatens their Union High School District sails a bit closer to the wind, but still manages to carry over a quarter of its April payment forward on top financial stability. Please vote no on 2. On the surface, Proposition 2’s revisions serve to make some of its reserves buffer. The clause was inserted without any Legislative reasonable changes to the state’s base rainy day fund Analyst’s Office review, committee discussion, or public mechanics. Not so reasonably, an additional school rainy comment. When asked why anything so antithetical day fund was added. While ostensibly created to help to “fiscal prudence” was injected, legislators state that schools, it is funded by pulling money out of California’s payments to the state’s school rainy day fund “will only constitutional minimum school funding guarantee. happen once every 25 years or so.” The legislative analyst While the state promises to slosh these funds back dursimply says it’s unlikely to happen before 2020. While not ing downturns, the state has a horrible school payment very reassuring, these responses make one ask, “Why the history. Nevertheless, this combination was put on the rush then to insert the carry-over cap?” ballot by the Legislature this spring, and then something GUEST Possibly the governor believes that the school savweirder happened. OPINION ings fund will be triggered much sooner. This is bad news. In June the governor used the budget negotiations to When the schools’ constitutionally guaranteed 40 percent insert a destructive clause into the education code. Triggered if Proposition 2 passes, it restricts all school districts to less share of the state budget actually out-paces inflation, we are not than three weeks of year-end operating cash the year after any dollar going to give it to schools, but “save” it for them instead. (Please flows into that state school “rainy day” fund. Currently, districts consider how this thinking keeps us ranked in the bottom 10 — 50th across the state hold about $8 billion at the end of each year — currently — nationwide in per-pupil spending.) Theoretically, we are doing this for the schools’ sake because state roughly two months’ operating expenses — in line with standard government financial guidelines. So over $5 billion of local school funding is so volatile and because 80 percent of our schools are heavsavings statewide would have to be spent if anything ever sloshed ily dependent upon state funding. But why are they so dependent on volatile state funding? Because California actively and passively into the school fund. For most of our local districts, this would mean dumping April has drained stable, reliable property tax revenue away from schools property and parcel taxes by the end of June. Normally this first tax for its own obligations and political objectives. installment funds operations from July through November, before See PROPOSITION 2, page 22 the second annual property tax installment arrives in December. T LETTE RS Our readers write Council blocked commission review Editor: Traffic impacts are one of the major issues associated with the specific plan, the subject of several consultant studies, the concern of many local residents, and the issue that triggered the resident uprising and activity to bring Measure M to the ballot box. As a recent six-year member of the city’s Transportation Commission, I bear witness to the city staff’s and the council’s early and continued efforts to block its own Transportation Commission from analyzing the traffic impact of the specific plan. It started with the city manager and staff presenting the council with their plan for how the specific plan should be analyzed and presented to the public, and eventually approved by council. Their plan included a series of public presentations, and a formal review by the Planning Commission. Initially, their plan did not include a formal review by the Transportation Commission. When members of that commission requested an opportunity to review and make recommendations to the council, the staff stalled, and our requests were eventually denied, citing the fact that the council had already approved a formal plan that did not call for that commission’s review. Our direct requests to council members for such an opportunity were also denied. We were told that we could always speak up as individuals at a council meeting (Right! The most recent traffic presentation to the council by staff took 25 minutes without question time. I’m supposed to do it in three minutes?) And if we commissioners met together to discuss it outside of the scheduled commission meetings, we’re liable to be in violation of the Brown Act. The result was that people in our community who were very experienced with local traffic issues were repeatedly denied the opportunity, as a group, to review and comment on the traffic impact and proposed mitigation measures associated with the specific plan. I view this as a deliberate effort by the city manager, staff, and council, from the beginning, to railroad this project through. Don’t let this happen. Vote yes on M. This railroading wasn’t the first time. We were also excluded from doing a critical review of the traffic issues associated with the Facebook EIR; we faced the same stalling by staff, and in fact we were told by staff that it was the council’s wish that we not prepare a report. They also suggested that we could make a three-minute report at a council meeting. We see now how the Facebook traffic has turned out! It would seem that city staff does not want to hear any negative comments that could introduce some resistance to new project developments in the city, and possibly hinder some resulting staff growth and security, and that the council is too weak to resist the staff. Charlie Bourne Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park For downtown vibrancy, defeat Measure M Editor: How can anyone who supports downtown vibrancy also support Measure M? I don’t understand. Downtown is defined as the area around Santa Cruz Avenue, bounded by Oak Grove, Menlo Avenue, El Camino Real and University Avenue. It includes stores on the brink of insolvency, restaurants in desperate need of customers, and seven second-hand stores at a time when all other cities are booming. (Second-hand stores are fine, but do we need seven?) How can restricting customers, as Measure M most admittedly will do, increase vibrancy downtown? Office space provides the foot traffic that Menlo Park so desperately needs. That is why the Chamber of Commerce is opposed to Measure M. As many people now realize, office space creates the least amount of traffic of all commercial uses. Expect at least 40 percent of office workers to not commute by car. Traffic Management programs, which the recent traffic report did not account for, are very successful. For example, at SRI, 40 percent of workers do not commute by car. At the huge Bayland complex in San Mateo, also near the train, the number is 50 percent. The folks who Continued on next page October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ21 V I E W P O I N T Measure M would take away council’s negotiating power By Catherine Carlton A s the vice mayor of Menlo Park and parent of two children at Las Lomitas, I have the opportunity to speak with a variety of residents. Many people are confused about Measure M and what will happen to Menlo Park if it passes, so I am writing to clarify a few issues. Measure M proponents claim that they are saving Menlo Park from “mega-office buildings.” The truth is that the Measure M does absolutely nothing to change the size of the buildings, nor the total amount of development overall, but it will change the mix of what is in them. Please note that the majority of the development planned for El Camino Real is residences, and less than half of the buildings would be offices and retail. This balance was designed to create the minimum traffic impact, LE TTE R S Our readers write Continued from previous page scream about out-of-town office auto commuters at rush hour are not being completely honest. Yes. If you really want downtown vibrancy (and less traffic), please vote no on Measure M. W. Scott Lohmann Doris Drive, Menlo Park Measure M neither confusing, too restrictive Editor: Re Measure M: I am a retired land use attorney who has worked in this area since the 1960s. I have worked with several land use initiatives. The anti-M claim that M is confusing and too restrictive is dishonest. It is neither. In truth M changes only four specific items in the 2012 specific plan. All else is left entirely under council control. A public vote is required only for those four changes, nothing else. For proof, voters need only read the impartial summary of M in the voters’ handbook, which every voter has just received in the mail. Its author is the Menlo Park city attorney. M’s four changes are: Q No single office project may exceed 100,000 square feet. Q Total net new office space may not exceed 240,820 square feet. Q Total net new commercial space may not exceed the and to provide vibrancy, safety sure M would cause delays for and financial sustainability for years in eliminating the ugly, our community. The result blighted parcels along El Camiof Measure M is that the City no Real. A recent economic Council would no longer be able report by Brion & Associates to negotiate with developers if concluded that each year we the change “frustrates Measure delay allowing projects to move forward results in the M,” including building loss of over $3 million size or usage changes. a year to schools. With Measure M propothe increasing number nents claim that they of students in our comare saving Menlo Park munity, our schools from traffic, but the need additional funds truth is that Measure to continue delivering M would likely make the high level of edutraffic much worse GUEST than current uses OPINION cation they provide. Further, the fire disallowed under the trict could be out more specific plan. By significantly increasing retail and than $800,000 annually, and the potentially re-introducing med- town’s general fund more than ical offices, Measure M would $1.4 million annually. Finally, Measure M locks greatly increase the resulting traffic on El Camino Real Menlo Park into many details and the surrounding neighbor- that will be extremely difficult to change. The proponents of hoods. To make matters worse, Mea- Measure M make false asser- tions that development plans for El Camino Real are almost approved — we don’t have plans submitted by Stanford (they haven’t started their redesign yet), and only have preliminary plans from Greenheart for an environmental impact report (EIR). Council member Kirstin Keith and I negotiated with Stanford and received an agreement for a plaza larger than the Cafe Borrone plaza, a safer route to school via a bike and pedestrian undercrossing, and a ban on medical offices, and we started down the path for a development that would provide attractive vibrancy, safety and financial sustainability to Menlo Park. We are not finished. However, if Measure M passes, these agreements as well as the City Council’s ability to negotiate with developers further will go away. Under Measure M, the long list of items that will require elections to make even the smallest future corrections. Start with Section 3, eight pages long, which includes at least 10 definitions and many development rules and tables that will be frozen into our zoning rules by Measure M. Then read Section 4, which clearly states that virtually all of those definitions and rules cited in Section 3 can be changed only by city-wide elections, a requirement that will bog down any effort to update the specific plan to fix errors, or to accommodate changing conditions over time. Finally, having confirmed that Measure M supporters are trying to conceal the true impacts their initiative, ask yourself if you should believe anything else that they are telling you about it. Measure M is a mistake. Vote no on M. Frank Tucker Politzer Drive, Menlo Park amount stated by the council itself in the specific plan (were they not truthful?). Q A commonsense definition of open space, which excludes upper floor balconies and rooftops. The first three items can be increased if voters approve. That is it. Confirmed in the impartial summary by the city attorney. See the voters’ handbook. Palo Alto passed such an initiative in 1965 to protect its parks. For 49 years it has done the job, neither confusing nor too restrictive, with only one contested election. Unable to win by defending their aggressive pro-development policies, anti-M spends obscene amounts of money to deceive the voters. Voters should not be deceived. Tom Jordan Palo Alto Read Measure M, then vote no Editor: The supporters of Measure M want you to believe that their 12-page initiative is a minor tweak to Menlo Park’s downtown specific plan, and that only a couple of items will require future city-wide votes if changes are needed. Nothing could be farther from the truth, and you can confirm that yourself. If you are undecided on M, you owe it to yourself to read the actual text of the initiative on the city’s web site (menlopark.org/MeasureM) to see 22QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 PROPROSITION 2 continued from page 21 For example, every school district in San Mateo County should receive all its base funding from local property tax. We pay it, the county collects it, but then the county has been instructed to divert $150 million of educationallocated taxes to satisfy two of the state’s obligations. The county gets this by redirecting all the property tax away from Redwood City Elementary, Ravenswood Elementary, and the other less-well-off districts. Leaving them 100 negotiations like these, as well as fixing unintended consequences and small changes that evolve over time, can be managed only through a full ballot measure, requiring about $100,000, volunteers, lawn signs, and contentious campaigns. Measure M does not fix the issues that its proponents claim. It is a poorly written document that does nothing to limit growth or traffic, but instead adds many negative impacts on our city and schools that will be extremely difficult to fix. I urge you to respect the thousands of residents who participated in forming the specific plan over six years. The current plan supports vibrant growth that is environmentally and financially sustainable. Please take the time to understand the facts and join me in voting no on Measure M. Catherine Carlton was elected to the Menlo Park City Council in 2012. She is currently the city’s vice mayor. Editor: In the downtown visioning meetings and community surveys, residents’ top concern was preserving the “village character” of Menlo Park, and they cited Cafe Borrone as an example of the kind of communityfriendly development they’d like to see more of. Fast-forward: The City Council, cozying up to Stanford behind the scenes, threw out the community’s vision, and gave Stanford what amounts to Redwood City or San Jose-style zoning. No surprise that Stanford came back with an unprecedentedly gargantuan office park/ housing project nearly a third of a mile long, four- and five-stories high, and over 440,000 square feet — half of it offices. This is a far cry from Cafe Borrone-style retail, or from the hotel and senior housing Stanford led the city to believe it intended to build on El Camino. Measure M, though much too modest to fix the entire specific plan, at least downsizes the proposed 200,000 square feet of offices sought by both Stanford and Greenheart, to a more reasonable 100,000 square feet per project. The rest of the specific plan remains in force, and the council can, and should, amend it further to preserve our suburban character while attracting more retail that benefits residents. The incumbents have bent over backwards to benefit big developers at the expense of residents. Time to send them packing, and to vote yes on M. Cherie Zaslawsky Oak Lane, Menlo Park percent dependent on ... yes, volatile state funding. The state was late paying them $29 million it owed them just this June 30, at the end of the fiscal year. Down from $52 million two years earlier. This is why earlier versions of state rainy day funds never dared touch school funding. Schools have already given at the collection box. But institutional memory has fallen victim to term limits. Proposition 2 is a jerryrigged solution and a nonstarter. Yes, the state has been historically unwilling to contribute to its existing rainy day fund. But Gov. Brown fed the existing fund $1.6 billion this year, and paid down $1.6 billion of debt. He can continue, or cut this back to the $1 billion each that the new Proposition 2 regulations would allow. Meanwhile, the risk to our schools is just too great. Gov. Brown can bring back better mechanics on a 2016 ballot — without baggage that threatens our schools. Please vote no on 2 to keep local control in our local schools. Jennifer Bestor is the volunteer and research director of Educate Our State. She lives in Menlo Park. Send incumbents packing, vote yes on M V I E W P O I N T City didn’t have to destroy Fremont Park heritage tree Where scholarship and values matter By Michael Closson and I challenged their dire assessment. We urged them to n Tuesday, Sept. 16, I honor the 15-day appeal period, chained myself to a tree rope off the area so no one in Fremont Park in a would be hurt if it did fall, and futile attempt to prevent the city use the time to explore other of Menlo Park from cutting it remedies. A number of us sugdown. The tree was a heritage gested that the tree’s trunk could tree, a large and beautiful Ital- be propped up with one or more ian Stone Pine (pinus pinea) steel braces. But they rejected measuring at its base 5 feet in that solution, saying the bracing diameter and 14 feet in circum- could damage the tree’s roots ference. It boasted a tilting trunk and require moving a sidewalk. It appeared to me the supporting great curvcity officials thought ing limbs that swept bracing the tree was out over the park. just too much trouble. City officials said But my question is: the tilt had increased Why should we not recently and therefore take a lot of trouble the pine tree was a to preserve beautiful hazard that required heritage trees? Accordimmediate destruction. GUEST I question both the OPINION ing to Wikipedia, “a heritage tree is typishort-term and longcally a large individual term handling of this tree with unique value that is situation by city staff members. City staff members posted a considered irreplaceable.” This removal notice on the tree the beautiful and unique Italian afternoon of Sept. 15. The notice Stone Pine certainly met those stated that citizens had 15 days criteria. And, since it was growto appeal the decision to take ing on city-owned land, the city down the tree if they submitted of Menlo Park had a responsibila signed letter along with a $175 ity to nurture that tree. I believe that the city and its “appeal fee.” Despite this notice, city staff immediately removed arborists must demonstrate betseveral of the tree’s limbs and ter attention to its heritage trees branches. The next morning in the future. This beautiful tree they showed up intent upon rap- could have lived for many more idly finishing the tree’s removal years if the city had taken good — thereby making a mockery of care of it. It had been tilting for the 15-day appeal period. That is decades. Why didn’t city staff when I decided to protest their prop it up years ago? Then we behavior by chaining myself to would still have a live tree and the city would have avoided the tree’s trunk. Shortly thereafter, the police killing a beautiful living thing, and higher-level city offi- loved by many people. Menlo Park’s official logo cials arrived on the scene and attempted to placate the gather- boasts a large tree. It is high time ing crowd. They explained that, the city lives up to its logo! Michael Closson is the retired although the tree was healthy, executive director of Acterra its tilt had recently increased, and a resident of Menlo Park. due in part to not watering it during the drought, and it had Michael Closson become such a public hazard 978 Menlo Ave. that it needed to be removed Menlo Park, CA 94025 immediately. 650-450-2025 A number of the protesters O Q TOW N S Q UA R E Post your news and views on TownSquare at: www.TheAlmanacOnline.com Support 7KH$OPDQDF·V print and online coverage of our community. -RLQWRGD\6XSSRUW/RFDO-RXUQDOLVPRUJ$OPDQDF PRESCHOOL THROUGH 12th GRADE ON ONE CAMPUS 2014 Open House Schedule Preschool & Kindergarten October 4 November 15 Middle School October 18 November 8 Preparatory October 19 November 9 Please visit our website for open house details 150 Valparaiso Avenue Atherton, CA 94027 Inquiries and RSVP: admission@shschools.org www.shschools.org /SacredHeartSchoolsAtherton /SHSAtherton /SacredHeartSchools Town of Portola Valley Notice of Intent to Adopt a Negative Declaration A notice, pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act of 1970, as amended (Public 5HVRXUFHV&RGHHWVHTWKDWWKHIROORZLQJSURMHFWZLOOQRWKDYHDVLJQLÀFDQWHIIHFWRQWKH environment. Project Title: Town of Portola Valley Housing Element Contact Person: Karen Kristiansson Project Location: Affects all of Portola Valley Phone Number: (650) 851-1700 x212 Project Description: The project is to update the Housing Element of the Town of Portola Valley General Plan as required by Government Code Sections 65580 et seq. The Housing Element is a comprehensive statement by WKH7RZQGHVFULELQJWKHKRXVLQJQHHGVRI3RUWROD9DOOH\DQGKRZWKH7RZQ·VSODQVSROLFLHVSURJUDPV and regulations facilitate and encourage the development, improvement and preservation of housing for all economic segments of the community. The draft 2014 Housing Element update contains eight SURJUDPV,QFOXVLRQDU\+RXVLQJ$IÀOLDWHG+RXVLQJ6HFRQG8QLWV6KDUHG+RXVLQJ Fair Housing; 6) Energy Conservation and Sustainability; 7) Explore Future Housing Needs and Potential Housing Programs; 8) Transitional and Supportive Housing Ordinance Amendment. These SURJUDPVVHWIRUWKWKH7RZQ·VVWUDWHJ\IRUHQKDQFLQJDQGSUHVHUYLQJWKHKRXVLQJVWRFNIRUH[SDQGLQJ housing opportunities for various economic segments, and for meeting state requirements. The +RXVLQJ(OHPHQWDOVRSURYLGHVSROLF\JXLGDQFHIRUGHFLVLRQPDNLQJUHODWHGWRKRXVLQJ Purpose of Notice: The purpose of this notice is to inform you that a Negative Declaration has been recommended for this project. Approval of a Negative Declaration does not constitute approval of the project under consideration. The decision to approve or deny the project is a separate action. Address where document may be reviewed: Portola Valley Town Hall, 765 Portola Rd., Portola Valley, California Public Review Period: Begins 10/22/14 Ends:11/20/14 Scheduled Public Hearings (date, time, place), if known: • 3ODQQLQJ&RPPLVVLRQKHDULQJRQ1RYHPEHUSP+LVWRULF6FKRROKRXVH 765 Portola Rd. • 7RZQ&RXQFLOKHDULQJRQ-DQXDU\SP+LVWRULF6FKRROKRXVH 765 Portola Rd. October 22, 2014QTheAlmanacOnline.comQThe AlmanacQ23 Ed Kahl presents the very best of Woodside. Woodside – This beautiful sunswept home combines the stateliness of a traditional East Coast manse with the inviting expanse of a California country estate – light-filled rooms, vaulted ceilings, walls of glass opening to the lawn, garden and the large fruit orchard. exclusively listed at $6,600,000 1.1 acre F built in 2010 views of Mt. Diablo F 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths F fireplaces in LR and family room F luxurious master suite w/balcony F office on first floor, bonus media room F separate 3-car garage w/storage F excellent Las Lomitas schools F F D L SO D L SO PORTOLA VALLEY – 2.9 acre lot with great views. exclusively listed at $3,250,000 MOUNTAIN HOME RD, WOODSIDE – Fabulous estate home on 3 acres. exclusively listed at $7,750,000 Ed Kahl www.EdKahl.com 400-2796 24QThe AlmanacQTheAlmanacOnline.comQOctober 22, 2014 Ed Kahl - Over $1 Billion Sold • MA in Economics from UC • Real Estate Broker since 1972 • Top 1% of Coldwell Banker agents • Real Estate experience you can trust
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