[syndicated profile] sanjosespotlight2_feed

Posted by Joyce Chu

If San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan becomes California’s next governor, policy experts say some homeless solutions he has implemented in Silicon Valley’s largest city could work — but others may fall flat.

Mahan has scaled up production of tiny homes, more than doubling the number of beds it operates last year to get people off the streets. He’s advocated for more state funding to address homelessness and called on Santa Clara County to increase its share of services. He’s upped encampment sweeps and slashed red tape in shelter production by declaring a homelessness crisis, and wants that to happen statewide. And he’s indicated he’s going to protect and expand federal Section 8 housing vouchers — though how he intends to do so is unclear.

When it comes to making tiny homes and interim housing the primary solution to solve homelessness, how that plays out largely depends on each city, according to Ryan Finnigan, deputy director of research for the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at University of California, Berkeley.

“San Jose was successful because they’ve kind of had an all hands on deck approach between the city, the service providers and philanthropy — and even the water district donating land for interim housing,” Finnigan told San José Spotlight. “(At the state level) you can provide the resources, and there’s some amount of streamlining that you can provide to make interim housing sites easier to permit, but you still have to have that recipe of the local folks coming together.”

Elizabeth Funk, CEO of DignityMoves, said Mahan’s strategy of building out temporary shelters is necessary to keep the crisis from getting worse.

“I think if we get everybody indoors, it takes the pressure off the system,” Funk told San José Spotlight. “But we first got to stop the devastation, and then we can build permanent housing that we need in a time frame that is realistic.”

Funk, who has worked closely with Mahan to build multiple tiny homes sites in San Jose and helped author several state bills, said there are several issues Mahan has been pushing as mayor that he would likely work to change if he becomes governor. One of those is making more state funding available to address homelessness and more flexible funding that wouldn’t be required just for permanent housing, she said.

This fiscal year, the state has zeroed out its main source of homelessness funding — the Homelessness Housing, Assistance and Prevention Program. The funding can be used toward homelessness prevention, rental assistance, temporary and permanent housing, outreach, services and shelter improvements. San Jose has largely spent the money on funding temporary shelter operations.

“A lot of our programs have now declared that unsheltered homelessness is the top priority, and yet the funding hasn’t caught up, and that’s going to be something he’s going to address,” Funk said.

Mahan’s gubernatorial campaign spokesperson did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

While temporary shelter may solve the problem of people living on the streets, it won’t solve homelessness at its root cause — the lack of affordable permanent housing. That isn’t being addressed, Benjamin Henwood, director of University of Southern California’s Homelessness Policy Research Institute, said.

In the 1980s, U.S. Housing and Urban Development began to slash its investments in low-income housing under President Ronald Reagan. Experts point to this time as the start of what has led to a significant shortfall of affordable homes.

“There’s no solution to homelessness without increasing the availability of affordable housing,” Henwood told San José Spotlight. “Maybe these tiny homes are preferable to living on the streets, but it’s not clear if that will be true over the long term, and whether or not people will eventually leave those communities. What’s the long-term plan here?”

The sustainability of Mahan’s tiny home plans is also coming under scrutiny, with advocates questioning the effectiveness of these sites after recent reports of poor management  across multiple locations.

When it comes to being more efficient and fast-tracking shelter production, experts agree it’s necessary to address the homelessness crisis.

“It is helpful to cut through the red tape that allows shelter programs to come together faster, but the local communities still have to be the ones that put up the land and the money in the first place for those sites to become reality,” Finnigan said.

In terms of how Mahan could expand Section 8 voucher programs, as stated on his housing platform, that can only be done at the congressional level since it is a federal program, Henwood said.

Section 8 vouchers are underfunded, with only one quarter of qualifying households receiving it. Others languish on housing voucher waitlists for years. Henwood said there hasn’t been broad consensus on this issue. Subsidized housing is not viewed in the same way as Medi-Cal and food aid needs.

“We can obviously afford it,” Henwood said. “I just think as a society, we haven’t said, ‘Yes, we believe that.'”

Contact Joyce Chu at joyce@sanjosespotlight.com or @joyce_speaks on X. 

The post Will Matt Mahan’s solutions to homelessness work for California? appeared first on San José Spotlight.

Friday Five

Mar. 20th, 2026 01:00 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

1. What was the reason you began a Dreamwidth or LiveJournal account (or both)?
I started LiveJournal in 2002 when a new friend (soon girlfriend) heard me saying that I wanted to write more and suggested LiveJournal. "What's LiveJournal?" I said, and she gave me an invite code, and here I am.

I moved to DW in 2011, I can't remember which exact thing made me do it but it was after Strikethrough, before things got very Russian but I think they were getting pretty Russian.

2. How many DW or LJ communities do you subscribe to?
Five.

3. Do you have a favorite community or one you check out often to see what's new?
I mean, they're all on my reading page. Most are pretty quiet; one I made for covid-cautious people and don't use much myself any more either (its name is a pun based on "herd immunity," that's how old it is...). The best are [community profile] thisfinecrew, for U.S. political actions people can taken (often online or relatively low-spoons) and [community profile] thissterlingcrew, the British version of the same thing. Very useful communities to have In These Times.

4. How did you pick your user name?
This one was picked by D and another friend (I now cannot remember who) independently when I was looking for a new one.

5. If you could change your user name, would you?
It's clearly from a very specific time in my life, when I was using the name Cosmo and studying linguistics.

As for changing it, I mean, I could. I have. My LJ went through a couple of names too. I almost never re-use user names either; I just use whatever sounds like a good idea at the time. I can barely remember what it was before, and would probably prefer that one now. I did make a concerted effort to get away from puns, things based on my real-life first name, or both; no wonder this is what my friends suggested for me, this is my Brand.


While I'm here, another point I've been meaning to make under this tag for a bit but haven't gotten around to: having been writing about my life for half of it now, I find myself wishing there was a way for tags to become, like, dormant or something. There are lots of tags that I want to keep having but am not going to add new entries to, so I wish I didn't always have to look at them in the list or when I'm choosing tags.

conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
And every one of those recs is better than the books. Well, I've shared my opinion on the books, the problems and characterization are insufficiently balanced for dual viewpoints.

But anyway, that's not what I'm thinking about. What I'm thinking about is Fabian and his generically shitty parents who clearly don't care about him very much. Read more... )

Peas

Mar. 20th, 2026 12:24 pm
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
[personal profile] igenlode
Excavated the dwarf peas from their newspaper, where they were starting to go mouldy (including, worryingly, some of the peas that were actually sprouting). I planted up the three best of them individually and transferred them to the mini-greenhouse, removing the sweet peas -- which necessitated writing individual labels for the latter! -- and put the rest of the ones that were showing signs of life into a single large pot to become 'pea-shoots', along with another five or six unsoaked peas from the packet. I still have a lot left in there....

There is germination in the Gypsophila elegans and possibly in the purple assortment.
beatrice_otter: Captain America (Captain America)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: MCU
Pairings/Characters: Bucky Barnes, Steve Rogers
Rating: Gen
Length: 15k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] rosepetalfall 
Theme: siblings, family

Summary: Bucky’s dad always says what they do is important.

“We give people the dignity they deserved in life,” he says, seriously.

Uncle Danny laughs at that. “Jimmy-kid,” he says, “your old man has got some real trumped up notions of what it is we do. Death ain’t beautiful. We just help create the illusion that it can be.”

Reccer's Notes: This is a really interesting look at Bucky's life before the war, and his family, and all the things that shaped him. The OCs are very well drawn and I love the details and thematic resonance of the family business.

Fanwork Links: The Undertaker's Children
beatrice_otter: Russell Crowe as Inspector Javert (Javert)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Les Misérables - Victor Hugo
Pairings/Characters: Cosette/Courfeyrac
Rating: teen
Length: 125k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] AMarguerite 
Theme: siblings, humor, novel-length, epic works, old fandoms, book fandoms, small fandoms, AU, fork in the road, family, everybody lives, crack, female friendship, fixit, happy endings, just plain fun, politics, rare pairings,

Summary: Courfeyrac falls through the roof of no. 7 Rue de l'Homme Armé, taking down not only the ceiling, but the carefully built walls Valjean has constructed around himself and Cosette. Wacky hijinks ensue.

Reccer's Notes: This fic is madcap and fun in all the best ways. The shenanigans and hijinks are wonderful ... and at the core of those shenanigans and hijinks are Courfreyac and his siblings, as they draw Cosette into a quirky but loving family. (And also try to get everyone safely through cholera and a failed revolution.) I love all of the distinct and interesting characters, both canon and OC. I love the shenanigans. I love that Cosette gets a chance to truly blossom and form friendships. It's wonderful

Fanwork Links: Some Friendlier Sky
beatrice_otter: Me in red--face not shown (Default)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Ballet Shoes
Characters/Pairings: Posy Fossil
Rating: General
Length: 5203 words
Author Links:
Theme: siblings, family, female characters, gen, book fandoms, old fandoms, small fandoms, future fic

Summary: "There was a terrific row when Nana found out I'd only written one letter so she's sent me to write to you all properly, only I don't have anything left to say now and I do think it's silly to have to copy out the same letter twice." Posy Fossil's letters to her sisters from ballet school in Czechoslovakia, 1936-1938.

Reccer's Notes: Ballet Shoes is a delightful story about three sisters in 1930s Britain, their guardian, and their nanny. At the end of the story, one goes off to Hollywood under a studio contract, one goes to live by an aerodrome to learn to fly, and the youngest (Posy) goes to Czechoslovakia to be trained as a ballet dancer. Posy, the youngest, loves her sisters but is also self-centered and focused on her dancing. This is the first time she's ever been away from her sisters since she was a baby, and the letters trace that relationship even as they're hundreds and thousands of miles apart. But no matter how far apart they are, no matter how different their lives are, they still love one another. [personal profile] deepdarkwaters captures Posy's character, and her relationship with her sisters, perfectly.

Story Links: With Love, Posy
beanside: Papa Perpetua V from Ghost (Default)
[personal profile] beanside
It's Friday! Also the first day of Spring! Huzzah! Now if the weather will just behave like it's spring, we'd be in business. Though I think it's supposed to get up near 70 degrees today, so maybe it's figured its shit out. Though it is going to be kind of rainiy, which I'm a little sick of. We've had a lot of precipitation recently. It's to the point that seeing sun is a special occasion.

Yoda continues to improve from his little tummy issues. I fried up plain ground chicken, and he ate every bit of that in several small meals, and it all stayed down. Once I wake up a little more, I'll wipe out the pan and make another batch for today. He's still not 100%. Still a little tired and not as perky as normal. But he's definitely improving. Last night, he barked ferociously at the UPS person, so that was heartening. He had been indifferent for the last two days. I'm hoping he's even a little better today. He also agreed to go for a walk, which is the first time he's done that in probably 36 hours. (We have pads down for him in case and he was damn sure using them. Still has diarrhea, but hopefully that will improve now that he's eating again.

Yesterday was a good day. Not too busy, I took about 20 calls, which is on target, and spent the rest of the day watching for cancellations. After work, Jess made our hashbrown chorizo casserole, which tasted especially good. Then I relaxed a bit, watched a couple of videos, and then went to bed. Even UPS came a touch early so I didn't have to stay up for hours.

I got a few happy things. One was more cookies from the Honolulu Cookie Company. I love these fucking cookies. They're the best thing. Second was Jess' swimwear, and last was some shapewear for me. I'm a little embarrassed about the weight I've gained back as the Rybelsus is working less. I have hopes that the Mounjaro will do something for that, but that doesn't help me for the cruise. I've got all these great dresses, and I want to look cute in them. It's actually rather comfortable, I have to admit. I don't feel squished, but it does make the line of the dress a little cleaner, so I'll probably try that out for formal night, and if I decide to wear a dress any other time.

Today, I shall work, Jess has a checkup with their primary care, and then game, which shall be a lot of fun. Does the team fight a storm giant? We'll see! They're on their way to meet with a noble who has a shard of the shield they're trying to collect. That, plus diplomacy should take up the entire session. Then we'll need to figure out when we can play again. We're getting close to having to schedule the endgame sessions, which will see it move from Fridays to Saturdays, so that a player who had to drop because of work can play the last big battle with the goddess of the dragons and her handmaids. It should be a lot of fun. While it's bittersweet to have another game end, especially one that's been going on for over 5 years, I'm glad to open up time for other games. This is also good because two of my Wednesday games are moving to Fridays due to my school schedule. The college's assignments run Thursday to Wednesday, so I wanted Wednesday free in case I'm needing to cram the work in if I'm running late. I've also cut down to one game per day on the weekend so I'll have a bit of time to study.

Also, though I was already doing it to some extent, limiting one shots. I think that'll help get things rolling. I do have a short roleplay that I need to guide for Jess and one of her friends that is a prequel to the new campaign. I do have a one-shot scheduled for tomorrow, but that's the placeholder while I finish getting the stuff ready for the new game, so they still get to play in the interim. Plus, it's an easy game to run. Roleplay heavy. No combat unless they start shit.

Tomorrow, we have the last two game Saturday that I shall have for a while. First the one shot with the smaller server, and then Crooked Moon with the main server in the evening, and Sunday we have Strixhaven, which I'm looking forward to, since I can debut my new character artwork which I love so much. It really helped me flesh out who the character is as a person.

Oh, I also got my new dutch oven! It's a bright orange monstrosity of an enameled cast iron pan. It's also enormous. I could shove a whole roasting chicken in here to make soup. Which is kind of the plan. I've got a rotisserie chicken I could throw in today and make delicious chicken soup. I'm not sure whether chicken rice or noodle. I will have to think on it.

Tomorrow, I think I'm doing the stuffed shells, and then Sunday maybe beef barley soup. I was going to make stew, but I saw the barley in the cupboard yesterday and am considering that.

We'll see for tonight how much work I want to do. I might order out, or I might pull out the ribs and use up the golden bbq sauce I got from Navajo Mike's. Then it's just a matter of putting stuff on other stuff.

Tomorrow morning, I shall run over to the pharmacy and pick up the Mounjaro and other meds. I'm not sure where I'm going to inject. I'll need to read over the pamphlet to see what the options are. I sure hope switching from a GLP-1 to a combination GIP and GLP-1 will do the trick. Otherwise, I suppose there's Jardiance, which is a SGLT2 Inhibitor. We'll see! I really like the convenience of the Mounjaro, since it's a once a week injection. We'll see how it goes.

I may also run up as far as Luna's House to pick up my prizes from the virtual auction. I have a prize from the Holiday one I never picked up, so I'll see if it's still available. If I have time, I could go to the emissions center and get that done as well. Might be a lot to fit into 3 hours, though.

Sunday, before game, I'd like to make the pineapple coconut macadamia pancake batter I got. It just sounds baller. I wish I had coconut syrup to put on them, but alas. If they're good, I'll do it next time.

48 days out from the Alaska trip. It's creeping closer. Soon, I'll be able to print luggage tags and boarding passes. I'm still worried about what we're going to do about Yoda, but hopefully, he settles into being boarded well. I wish we had a little more time, but we'll make it work.

I'm staring to sit with the fact that it's going to be a long damn flight. We're in first class, so it shouldn't be bad, but I really am not a fan of flying. I deal, and I'm better than I used to be, but still. It's not my favorite thing to do. Still, I'm just very excited about it. I want to get going.

Oh, I also forgot to mention that we got tickets for a concert in Newark, NJ! They're doing a tour for the Undertale Determination Symphony. I don't really know Undertale, but it's Jess' favorite video game, so when it turned out that there was a concert coming on a day we could do it, we went for it. I already bought the tickets and booked the hotel. They were coming a bit closer, Philly and DC, but those were both on a Sunday, which would be tough for me PTO wise. So, Newark. At least it's right on the Amtrak Train line, so we can take that up easily enough. I'm going to have to brush up on my Undertale music before November!

Okay, I suppose it's time to go cook Yoda some chicken. Everyone have a fabulous Friday!
swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower
Forgery: where art and crime intersect.

Not all kinds of forgery are art, of course. When my fourteen-year-old self forged my father's signature on my practice records to assure my band director that yes, of course I practiced at home as much as I was supposed to, there was no art involved there. (Rather the opposite, in fact.) I suppose you could argue that mimicking someone's handwriting is calligraphic forgery, but that feels to me like it's stretching the point. Counterfeiting we've already talked about separately, in the first year of this Patreon; the manufacture of fake IDs or other legal documents, or of something like knockoff Gucci purses, are also not the focus of this essay.

No, here we're concerned with the creation of fake objects of art, whether works attributed to a specific artist, or anonymous artifacts of a particular place and time. And this is a topic I find fascinatingly squirrelly.

The techniques necessary to pull this off have gotten increasingly sophisticated over time. Back in the day -- or even now, if you're selling to a credulous enough fool -- anything that passed muster to a casual glance might suffice. Get yourself a fresh sheet of parchment, papyrus, or paper, write or draw on it, apply some physical and chemical stresses to make it look old, and you're good to go. Fire a pot or clay figure, or carve something out of stone, then batter it around for that authentic chipped look. Maybe even stamp out an ancient coin or two, if it's a piece rare enough to be worth substantially more than its metal content.

These days, it's not nearly that simple. We have carbon dating, spectroscopic analysis, and other high-tech methods of determining whether some detail is out of place. Which doesn't mean forgeries have gone away; it just means that talented forger needs to know a lot more than just what their proposed artifact should look like. There's a thriving market in blank fragments of ancient papyrus -- so the substrate will pass an age check even if what's written on it is new -- and who knows what texts have been scraped off bits of parchment, what paintings have been covered or rubbed away, so something more lucrative can be put in their place. The best forgers need to know the chemistry of inks and paints, how to make the right tools, the techniques used back then, so that only the closest analysis by the most skilled experts can spot the fake.

Nor is it only about the object itself. These days, we also pay a lot of attention to provenance: the history of an object's ownership, which can help to prove that it wasn't made last week. (A very similar term, provenience, is used in archaeology to refer to where the object was found: relevant to sifting out illegally looted objects from those excavated under legitimate conditions.) Of course, if you want to pass off a fake as the real thing, you also have to forge a provenance -- hence the massive upswing after World War II in items that had been the property of an "anonymous Swiss collector," a fig leaf to cover Nazi theft and forgeries alike.

That's when you're just trying to make a Twelfth Dynasty Egyptian ushabti or a bronze ornament from Sanxingdui: a plausible example of a type, but nothing more specific than that. When you're trying to pass something off as a previously-unidentified Picasso or Rodin, then you can't hide behind the expected variations between different nameless historical artisans; you have to mimic not just the materials but the ideas, composition, and execution of that specific person -- well enough that it seems like it could have genuinely been their work.

And at that point, you very nearly have a Zen koan on your hands: if someone forges a Rembrandt so well it can't be told from the real thing, is there a meaningful difference? Is the art itself what's worthwhile, or the fact that it was made by a specific person?

The answer to that really depends on context. If I'm a layperson who likes Caravaggio's style of painting, and somebody else comes along who paints just like Caravaggio (without claiming those are his works), I might be delighted to acquire things of the exact type I like for a fraction of the cost. Yay for pretty art! By contrast, if a forger lies to me and I pay Caravaggio prices for something that doesn't suffer from the scarcity of the artist being dead for centuries, I'm probably going to be pissed. And if I'm an art historian trying to learn more about Caravaggio, that forger has actively poisoned the well of scholarship by introducing false data.

Some of our "forgery" problems now actual stem from situations more like that first example. You can buy a million and one plastic replicas of Michaelangelo's David in Florence, and nobody thinks of those as forgeries . . . but rewind a few centuries or millennia, and those replicas had to be hand-crafted out of marble or bronze or whatever suited the sculpture being copied. That wasn't forgery; it was just how art got replicated, and the best copyists were deploying a useful, legitimate skill. The same was true of paintings. Now, however, the interests of both scholarship and the aura of owning a verified-as-legitimate original mean we have to sort that historical wheat from the chaff.

Or take the workshop context in which many Renaissance artists operated. Apprentices were expected to mimic their master's style, and if the result was good enough, the master was free to sell those works under his (or, more rarely, her) own name. Again, nowadays we strive to separate those out from the authentic works of the master -- but that reflects a modern attitude where the individual genius is the most important thing, above whether it reflects their style or was made under their auspices.

Some forgeries are extremely famous. Han Van Meegeren had to out himself as a forger when he was accused of collaboration for selling a Vermeer to the Nazi Hermann Göring; to prove that he hadn't hocked a piece of cultural patrimony, he painted another one while court-appointed witnesses stood and watched. The Getty Museum in Los Angeles has spent quite a bit of money trying to prove the disputed authenticity of a kouros (a specific style of statue) they bought for seven million dollars, but the best they've been able to achieve is a label identifying it as "Greek, about 530 B.C., or modern forgery." The Boston Museum of Fine Arts similarly clings to the hope that their probably-fake "Minoan snake goddess" statuette might be the real thing.

One thing these forgeries have in common: the demand for the genuine article is high enough to make fakes worth the effort of their creation. Minoan snake goddesses got manufactured because Sir Arthur Evans' excavations at Knossos attracted a ton of publicity, and he was not particularly discriminating in buying the "discoveries" people brought to him. Few criminals bothered forging Indigenous art until collectors turned their attention toward those parts of the world, thereby creating demand. This can in turn come full circle: van Meegeren's post-trial fame made his paintings rise high enough in value that his own son wound up forging more of them.

Nobody knows for sure how many fakes are on display in museums, galleries, and private collections. Some estimates run very high, due to the way today's plutocrats treat the acquisition of art as an investment strategy and display of status, while others say that improved methods of detection and the emphasis on authenticating an object before somebody forks over millions for it have greatly reduced the incidence. We'll never really know for sure, because of the loss of face inherent in admitting you paid too much for a forgery -- including the cratering in value for other works that might become suspect by association. But if you want to tell a story of trickery and sordid doings, the art world is rife with possibility!

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/aYnVC2)

Burn, doors

Mar. 19th, 2026 06:44 pm
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
Took till about 2 pm but all of the brush from yesterday's activities has been burnt up.   I got pretty hot and tired.  Drank about a gallon of water/gatoraid.  Missed the rock show/conference in Willits.  Oh well, next time.  
Tomorrow is planting little plants in the garden, finishing the compost bin cleanout and cleaning the filthy horse corral. 
There are still broccoli plants to put out, some pink mitzuna and dill that really wants to be planted out.  I'd love to transplant some of the baby marigolds but don't think they are quite ready yet, we'll see.  I might even risk planting out squash and cucumbers...
There is a big kerfuffle going on down in SF about doors.  All four of the doors that lead to the garden need replacing.  The bottom of the downstairs flat door was substantially rotted with the exterior face peeling off up about a foot. ICK.  We like getting lots of light into the house so chose doors that were 3/4 glass with about 18 inches of wood on the bottom.  Sadly they don't actually make that door in an exterior model. These are aluminum clad doors that come with an exterior finish that matches the windows.  We thought we might use a different manufacturer but of course the finishes don't match. In fact the color pallets were so different we couldn't even see a contrasting color we could use. Sigh.  So full glass, double pane doors. They have a coating on one pane that is virtually unbreakable so no security worries. 
[syndicated profile] sanjosespotlight2_feed

Posted by Maryanne Casas-Perez

Cupertino officials are asking residents if they’re willing to pay more taxes, as the city faces mounting financial pressures and rising service costs.

The City Council on Tuesday directed staff to poll residents on a potential increase to the city’s utility users tax, signaling that as the most likely path toward placing a measure on the Nov. 3 election ballot. Officials also considered other revenue generating options, such as increasing the local sales tax or updating the city’s business license tax, which hasn’t been revised since 1992. City polling will include an additional question tied to a potential parkland zoning related measure.

Councilmembers will review the polling data at a future meeting and consider whether to place a measure before voters in November.

The city’s utility users tax is set at 2.4%. The proposed increase to 4.8% would apply to services such as electricity, gas and telecommunications, though older adults are exempt to protect people on fixed incomes from rising utility costs.

Councilmember Sheila Mohan prefers a combination of two different taxes, which she said would be better than doubling the current utility tax.

“I think it would make sense not just to increase the (utility tax) at the current rate, but to at least look at some possibilities in terms of modernizing the tax base and see where that leads us,” Mohan said at the meeting.

The move comes as Cupertino grapples with budget concerns, including a proposed increase in its services contract with the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, which could go up from about $19 million to nearly $26 million annually. City officials said negotiations are ongoing and a counterproposal has been submitted, but no agreement has been reached.

Councilmember Liang Chao said she supports raising the utility tax, but is hesitant to raise sales taxes. She said the city should explore what she called a “modernization of tax,” including whether newer services like internet usage should be considered.

Mayor Kitty Moore supported polling residents on a utility tax increase, while opposing the idea of taxing internet access.

“I like the idea of perhaps going to some polling regarding, extending the (utility tax),  but I don’t like the idea of expanding, to either cable or internet, making it a little harder for people to have Wi-Fi,” Moore said at the meeting.

City officials acknowledged the tradeoffs between the different options. A staff presentation noted roughly 28.8% of sales tax revenue would come from non-residents, making it a potentially less burdensome option for locals. At the same time, officials warned that without additional revenue, the city may need to scale back capital improvement projects or other services to maintain core operations such as public safety and street maintenance.

Councilmember J.R. Fruen emphasized the importance of gauging public sentiment before making a decision. He urged staff to craft polling questions that clearly measure whether residents would support higher taxes.

“If we’re going to poll anyway, then I would want to have a little bit more information than just the one question,” he said at the meeting. “Maybe people are only okay with 2.4%. Maybe we even discovered that 2.4% is too much for folks right now. I think it’s worth finding out where the pressure point is.”

Cupertino resident Peggy Griffin asked the city to revisit other revenue options, including sales taxes and recreational fees, while warning that increasing utility taxes could disproportionately impact younger residents.

“The young people are going to be paying the tax because the seniors are exempt — that’s not fair,” Griffin said at the meeting.

In-line Donation CTA 2026 (950 x 287 px)

Rhoda Fry, a resident of more than 40 years, said the city should focus on revenue sources beyond taxing residents, noting that Cupertino’s business license tax is lower than in neighboring cities and could be updated. Cupertino’s business license tax generates about $14.19 per capita, significantly lower than cities such as Mountain View at $66.82, Palo Alto at $80.93 and San Jose at $88.66, according to a staff report.

“The city should have business license taxes that are comparable to those of our neighbors,” Fry told San José Spotlight.

Fry also questioned whether the city needs to conduct a poll.

“We should look at how Cupertino residents voted on recent sales tax measures to see if there’s an appetite before spending time and money on a poll,” she said.

Contact Maryanne Casas-Perez at maryanne@sanjosespotlight.com or @CasasPerezRed on X.

The post Cupertino to poll residents on potential tax increase appeared first on San José Spotlight.

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