Every NFL season, the Levi’s Stadium chefs try to take their menu to a new level of creativity. But when the Super Bowl comes to town, and fans are paying thousands of dollars to attend, the expectations soar.
So to impress the crowd on Sunday, the culinary team headed by Jon Severson, Levy regional chef, and Alvin Kabiling, executive chef for Levy at Levi’s Stadium, has created a “best of the bay” menu.
They’re showcasing signature ingredients from Marin County (oysters) to San Francisco/Half Moon Bay (crab) to the South Bay (garlic) along with locally sourced meat, cheese and produce.
According to the Levy company, which is the stadium food partner, 90 percent of the purveyors are based in California.
Pulling together a fan feast like this requires a sizeable staff. On game day, 2,000 Levy culinary, bar and serving team members will be working with 40 executive chefs behind the scenes. (Keep that in mind when you grouse about the prices.)
Here are some highlights:
Gilroy Garlic Steak Frites: A seared, sliced California hanger steak will be served au poivre atop hand-cut fries with crispy Gilroy garlic and pink peppercorns. Where: Sections 109 and 315, and in the East Field Club.
Dungeness Crab “Potachos”: Hand-cut Kennebec potato chips are layered with local crab — thankfully, the Bay Area’s beloved Dungeness season started in time — and then covered in a Petaluma white cheddar fondue sauce. Where: Sections 104, 124 and 306, and in the East Field Club.
“Super Shucker” Hog Island Oyster Sampler: This platter will feature a half-dozen oysters sourced from Hog Island’s Marin County farm in Marshall, and served with Hogwash mignonette, lemon and hot sauce. Where: Bud Light Club.
A dozen more special menu items will be available, along with the favorites — many from local restaurants — that the 49er faithful have been served all season.
The cocktail menu is wildly creative too. To commemorate the trip to the Bay Area for out-of-towners, there’s the “Karl the Fog” Misty Spritz. Because fans may not have seen much of Karl in S.F. during this sunny week, this misty mixture of Tanqueray Gin. elderflower liqueur, club soda and fresh lemon juice may have to suffice. Where: 400 East Club.
On the bright side is the Santa Clara Sunrise, which is Astral Blanco tequila with fresh orange juice and cherry juice. Where: East Field Club, Bud Light Club and 400 East Club.
The California Highway Patrol has issued a Silver Alert for an elderly woman who was last seen in San Jose last week and is believed to be at-risk.
On Sunday, the agency issued an alert for 82-year-old Karin Godfrey on behalf of the Gilroy Police Department. Authorities said Godfrey was last seen in the area of San Carlos and South 4th Street in downtown San Jose around 5:30 p.m. on Friday.
SILVER ALERT – Santa Clara, Alameda, San Francisco, Santa Cruz and Monterey Counties Last seen: San Carlos and South 4th Street, San Jose @GilroyPD
The Santa Clara Valley Water District, which owns two properties in Gilroy that have turned into the largest homeless encampment sites in the city, is trying to clear out the sites by the first week of November.
One of the sites is near Tomkins Court, just west of U.S. Highway 101 and east of Monterey Road. Valley Water Assistant Officer Mark Bilski said environmental and safety concerns, including interactions between unhoused residents and district staffers, are compelling the district to strictly enforce a 2023 city ordinance prohibiting outdoor camping in certain areas, such as schools and parks.
“We look to prioritize the worst environmental and safety impacts and address those, and anybody else who was exhibiting good camping behavior had an opportunity to be considered low-priority for the enforcement of the ordinance,” Bilski told CBS News Bay Area. “There continues to be staff safety incidents that we are struggling to mitigate. Our staff have police accompaniment every time they go out to do their work at these sites, and police are able to respond when safety incidents occur, but it’s always reactive.”
Bilski added that with people moving in and out of the site, there are growing concerns with the campers.
“There have been arson concerns, where campers have set other camper tents on fire. But aside from that, a major concern is aggressive dogs. There are tens of aggressive dogs on the site,” Bilski said. “We continue to recover weapons from campers at the site, bladed weapons, firearms.”
And now, Bilski said, they established a November 3rd deadline for all campers at both encampment sites to vacate the premises.
“This is my kitchen right here, area is just a mess right now. Trying to get everything all sorted out,” Greg Porter, who has been living at the encampment site near Tomkins Court since January, told CBS News Bay Area.
“I mean it’s pretty mellow, we all try to help each other out here,” Porter said, adding that he believes they are being misunderstood. “We’re just normal people, like everybody else. There’s no fires out here. None, you see it’s all green out here.”
CBS News Bay Area reached out to the City of Gilroy for comment, and a spokesperson sent a statement from Mayor Greg Bozzo, saying:
“I have long advocated for a collaborative approach to addressing housing and homelessness. As the city located farthest from the county’s core resources, we recognize that this is not a challenge we can solve on our own. Yesterday, I met with District Supervisor Silvia Arenas’ office, Director John Varela with Valley Water District 1, and staff from Valley Water, the County Office of Supportive Housing, and the City of Gilroy to discuss both immediate and long-term solutions to this challenge. Our teams are committed to exploring every viable option. While implementing change takes time, I’m optimistic that Valley Water will consider extending the encampment shutdown date to allow our teams to continue this important collaborative work.”
Community advocates said these campers have nowhere to go, and the lack of available shelter beds is an issue.
“The County operates a centralized shelter hotline called Here4You in partnership with Bill Wilson Center. Through this hotline, individuals and families are referred to shelter beds as they become available,” said KJ Kaminski, director of the Office of Supportive Housing in Santa Clara County, in a statement to CBS News Bay Area. “There is currently a waiting list for both family and single adult shelter beds.”
Porter said he will just have to find a temporary solution in the meantime.
“We’re just probably going to find a spot that we can go to, hopefully,” Porter said. “We’re hoping the mayor would come down and talk to us too.”
Meanwhile, Valley Water officials said they will be more flexible with campers who have mobility issues, but still expect everyone else to vacate by the November deadline.
For nearly a decade, developers have been trying to build a sand and gravel quarry on Sargent Ranch, a sprawling 6,500-acre property along Highway 101 south of Gilroy with a rich cultural history, extensive wildlife and years of failed development proposals, from golf courses to a casino.
Centered on one of the largest remaining private undeveloped landscapes in Santa Clara County, the quarry has been opposed by environmental groups, multiple city councils including in Santa Clara, Mountain View and Sunnyvale, and the Amah Mutsun tribal band, which previously inhabited the area for thousands of years.
Now in a significant shift, nearly 20% of the original Sargent Ranch will be preserved as open space.
The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, closed a $15.6 million deal on Oct. 18 to buy 1,340 acres along Sargent Ranch’s southwestern edges. That property, known as Pescadero Ranch, is a rustic expanse of oak-studded hills, pastures and streams that is 30% larger than San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park.
“It’s an inspirational property. It’s unique and special,” said Ezekiel Schlais, a senior property manager for the land trust, known as POST. “There are a few cattle fences and mildly graded dirt roads. But other than that, it is wild and untouched.”
Ezekiel Schlais, senior project manager for the Peninsula Open Space Trust, stands next to an old oak tree on the Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the 1,340-acre scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
POST plans to continue grazing cattle on the ranch. It eventually hopes to transfer the land to another owner — a rancher, a tribe, a parks agency or someone else — with legally binding language in the title that it cannot be developed.
What the deal means for the quarry plan on the rest of Sargent Ranch, however, among the biggest land use battles in the South Bay in recent years, is so far unclear.
Sargent Ranch’s long saga
Sargent Ranch is owned by an investor group led by Howard Justus of San Diego. The owners completed a draft environmental study for the quarry project in 2022. Santa Clara County planning officials are still writing responses to more than 10,000 public comments on the plan, nearly all of which opposed it, with the hopes of releasing a final environmental report next year. A vote to approve or deny the quarry by the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors is expected in late 2025 or 2026.
Justus could not be reached for comment Friday.
But in an interview with the Mercury News in 2019, he said the quarry would provide much-needed sand and gravel for Bay Area building projects, would only affect about 400 acres of Sargent Ranch and that he would be amenable to allowing some public hiking there.
“This is a project that allows for doing well by doing good,” said Justus, managing director of Debt Acquisition Company of America. “We are able to provide a consistent and reliable sand source for the South Bay at a fraction of the carbon footprint and to conserve an incredible piece of property.”
Justus’ group purchased Sargent Ranch in 2013 from Wayne Pierce, a La Jolla developer who tried to build golf courses, hotels, a casino and other projects there, only to file for bankruptcy.
Four years ago, Justus sold 1,340 acres of Sargent Ranch to David Wallace, a Danville investor.
Wallace considered various plans and then agreed to sell to POST.
“Our initial goal was to develop the property in a way that respected the land while simultaneously pursuing the best economic return,” Wallace said in a statement. “But the more time I spent there, the more it became evident that preservation was the only thoughtful path forward.”
The news that a former part of Sargent Ranch will be preserved has buoyed quarry opponents.
“I hope that the owners of Sargent Ranch decide to sell the rest of the land for conservation,” said Alice Kaufman, policy and advocacy director with Green Foothills, a nonprofit environmental group. “It should be obvious to them now that nobody wants this quarry. I hope they decide to cut their losses and realize that Santa Clara County is not interested in having an open pit mine here.”
Kaufman noted that the landscape forms a key route for mountain lions, bobcats, deer and other animals to migrate between the Santa Cruz Mountains, the Diablo Range and the Gabilan Range.
The property also has substantial cultural significance. The Amah Mutsun tribal band and its supporters refer to it as part of Juristac, a roughly 30,000-acre area between Gilroy and San Juan Bautista that was the ancestral home of the Amah Mutsun people for 10,000 years before Spanish explorers arrived in California in the 1700s.
“It is a sacred landscape,” said Valentin Lopez, chairman of the tribal band. “What they are proposing would be like building a sand and gravel mine at the Vatican or Mecca or any other holy site in the world. Indigenous spirituality has never been recognized, respected or protected. But it should be recognized the same as other world religions.”
When the Spanish built missions nearby, natives often fled to avoid cruel conditions, Lopez noted, hiding on Sargent Ranch, in the hills of Pacheco Pass, and other remote locations. The property became a Mexican land grant, and then was purchased by James P. Sargent, a New Hampshire native who came to California with his brothers during the Gold Rush, became wealthy and eventually represented Santa Clara County in the state Legislature from 1871 to 1873.
During the late 1800s, there was a railroad depot, cottages, a hotel, a post office, a saloon and an open-air dance floor near the ranch. The area was a popular spot for vacationers from San Jose and San Francisco, who hunted and had picnics along the nearby Pajaro River.
“When you are in this landscape you feel that you are seeing it as it was hundreds of years ago,” Kaufman said. “You feel that you are seeing wilderness. It’s hard to believe you are close to a massive metropolis of almost 8 million people. It is so important to preserve landscapes like this for future generations.”
A view of the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) A view of the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) A view of the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) A view of the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) A stately oak tree at the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Cattle graze at the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) A scenic view at the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Water runs through Pescadero Creek at the 1,340-acre Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the scenic property along the Santa Clara-Santa Cruz County border for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group) Peninsula Open Space Trust’s Marti Tedesco, chief marketing officer, left, and Ezekiel Schlais, senior project manager, stand on a hill overlooking Pescadero Ranch south of Gilroy, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. The trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, purchased the 1,340-acre scenic property at the Santa Clara- Santa Cruz County line for $15.6 million. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
Firefighters are bracing themselves for a busy day ahead of the Fourth of July. But fire crews also have a warning for those wanting to partake in fireworks.
Fire crews said they are already spread thin as some are fighting fires across the state, but the added mix of potential illegal fireworks and hot temperatures makes it dangerous.
“We want the public to know that it is not permissible to use illegal fireworks,” said Chelsea Burkett, a public information officer for Cal Fire of Santa Clara. “We are fully staffed and we’re working to continue buffering those numbers and bring in more personnel. [But] we have resources that got sent out to support some of the other fires that are happening and because of that we bring in more resources in.”
In Santa Clara County, Gilroy is the only city that permist the use of so-called Safe and Sane Fireworks.
In San Jose, all fireworks are illegal. Inviidulas caught lighting or owning fireworks can face fines.
Spectators are also subject to fines.
Burkett said it is best to leave the firworks in the hands of professionals.
“Theres a lot of safety practices that are put in before those shows are even allowed to start,” she said.
According to Cal Fire, due to triple digit heat and dry vegetation one spark could have dangerous consequences.