Browsing Category : Community

City Unions Ready to Re-Engage in Pension Negotiations


City unions are on their way back to the negotiating table with the City Administration, after reaching a compromise on how to approach Measure B. In a public announcement from the San Jose Police Officers Association, the union states: “In response to our pleas we received the attached letter from Mayor Liccardo that details a clear new direction from the City…

San Jose’s minimum wage law offers crucial lessons


This week marks the two-year anniversary of implementing a $2 increase in San Jose’s minimum wage. At the time, this 25 percent increase was one of the largest jumps in minimum wage in the nation’s history. Proponents said it would help low-wage workers pay for the basics with little harm to the economy, while opponents warned of economic catastrophe. As…

Shuttle Drivers’ Situation Epitomizes Income Inequality Struggle


In late 2013, activists in San Francisco began protesting against “Google buses” – large commuter shuttle buses that ferry high tech workers from all over the Bay Area to Silicon Valley under contract with companies such as Apple, Google, and Facebook.  The protests quickly spread to other cities including Oakland and Seattle.  And what it brought to the forefront is…

A Rising Silicon Valley Doesn’t Lift All Boats


Collective bargaining and good public policy is needed for California’s tech corridor to foster widely shared prosperity Silicon Valley is the center of innovation in our economy. But are the profits it generates helping to bolster a strong middle class? This question is as relevant today as it was in the 1990s, when the dot-com boom began. In fact, tech…

The Pension Story You Don’t Know


In San José’s pension wars, the truth has often been a casualty, and former Council member Pete Constant was often the trigger man. What a pleasant surprise to find the City has begun to set the record straight. Tweet

Silicon Valley Rising Fights for Worker Justice


Silicon Valley is an area of contrasts. When you stop at a traffic light in Silicon Valley you will often find a Maserati or Tesla on one side of you and a beaten up, 15-year-old Accord on the other. It seems there are more high-end Mercedes, Jaguars, Bentleys or the occasional Maybach than in other areas. Tweet

SJ Council District 4 Money


UPDATE:  Alex Torres appears to have submitted his fundraising report and has a bit over $5500, running neck in neck for last place with Johnny Lee. As we know from previous failed political races (Ro Khanna, Meg Witman) where uber-amounts of money were raised, it’s not always the case that the one with the  most money wins, but we’re keeping…