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Glenn Reeves
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Glenn Reeves
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Utility crews have capped a gas leak in the community of Los Altos that prompted evacuations of the downtown area, officials said.
Shortly before 10:10 a.m., the Santa Clara County Fire Department announced that they were responding to a “significant” gas leak in the area of Parking Plaza North near 1st Street. Officials said an “audible leak” was heard, indicating a significant amount of gas escaping.
Crews with Pacific Gas & Electric responded to the scene, while police and firefighters worked to clear the surrounding area.
In an update around 10:45 a.m., firefighters said PG&E was able to secure the gas leak. The public is urged to avoid the area until an all-clear is issued.
Officials did not say what caused the leak.
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Tim Fang
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As first reported by the Mountain View Voice, in Los Altos, some community members have no love for a parking proposal that would replace several tennis courts. This comes as the Mountain View Los Altos High School District tries to address parking issues for students, whose cars have spurred frustration from neighbors.
Last year, following community complaints, Los Altos City Council restricted parking around the high school. Since then, students and families have told the district they’ve had difficulty finding parking.
Now, the district is exploring options proposed by Quattrochi Kwok Architects that would use some of the tennis courts to create a new parking lot for students. There are several layouts the Board of Trustees reviewed at their August 18 meeting, that involved removing as few as two and as many as four tennis courts for the parking lot.
Los Altos High School has 12 tennis courts on campus, which coaches say is a point of pride in the region and allows them to host matches. The school also leaves the courts open for the community to play on when the high school teams are not playing.
“In this area, I mean, tennis is huge, and there’s not enough tennis courts,” said Edgar Marin, the Head Boy’s Varsity Tennis Coach at Los Altos High School.
Marin explained that many community members will line up to access the courts at the high school, with an especially large demand on weekend mornings and in the evenings on weekdays.
Marin added that at the school, the teams are inundated with talented students wanting to play on the teams, and because of the number of courts available, the school can have about 80 students in total playing between the boys and girls as well as varsity and junior varsity teams. Los Altos High School’s girl’s varsity team has been doing particularly well and was the runner up at state championships in 2024.
For the past several years, the coaches say four of the tennis courts have been occupied with construction and storage. The coaches had been banking on getting those courts back, so the news that those courts could instead be turned into parking spots concerned them.
“From our standpoint, like, I hate to lose it because I’m not sure how much they can gain out of parking, but in terms of tennis, it will be a big loss,” said Hung Nguyen, the Head Girl’s Varsity Tennis Coach at the school.
At a recent school board meeting on Sept. 29, parents, coaches, and students showed up to oppose this parking plan. Parents shared that parking has become more difficult to find since the city’s parking restrictions went into effect.
One community member told the board at the public comment section of that meeting “using a space that was to be returned to the tennis teams and even the community who are using those courts every week, I don’t think would be helping address the problem.”
At the tennis courts, many told NBC Bay Area they see the courts as an important community resource and don’t want to see any turned into a parking lot.
“The little bit of courts that we have that haven’t been converted to pickleball already are very valuable to us recreational tennis players,” said Kirthi Shankar, who comes from Palo Alto to play on the school’s tennis courts.
NBC Bay Area reached out to district officials for comment but have not heard back.
The board of trustees is slated to vote at their Oct. 13 meeting on whether to authorize Quattrochi Kwok Architects to do a study of the parking lot options.
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Alyssa Goard
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Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.
Re: “Bay Area needs unity to solve its problems” (Page A9, Aug. 17).
I second Russell Hancock’s recent call for bold regional leadership in this period of “federal ruckus.” As climate impacts intensify, California must act now to build climate resilience for tomorrow — and for future generations.
Coyote Valley, just south of San José, offers a model for how conservation and stewardship of nature can do that. Here, protected natural and working lands provide a buffer from catastrophic wildfires, floodplains recharge groundwater, wetlands soak up rains to prevent downstream flooding, farmlands grow our food and open space connects over one million acres of critical wildlife corridors. These aren’t just ecological perks. This is essential infrastructure.
Nature-based solutions to climate impacts are cost-effective, scalable and rooted in equity, protecting all communities while enhancing public health and biodiversity.
As Hancock wrote, let’s “put ourselves back in charge.” We can start by investing in the most powerful tool we have: nature.
Andrea Mackenzie
General manager, Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority
San Jose
Re: “Should California’s high-speed rail continue?” (Page A10, Aug. 17).
“Yes! California’s high-speed rail should continue,” is my answer to your question of Aug. 17.
I am a transplant from New England. California had many things of which to be proud. It is never a time to create things of which to be ashamed. All the reasons to attempt this project are still valid. We still need to wean ourselves off intrastate car and plane travel, or at least, provide a good alternative. This is still the environmentally friendly thing to do.
I believe the state must aggressively attempt to remove and mitigate obstacles and unnecessary burdens to the project, to seek greater efficiencies, and continue to fight for federal funding. I also support continued state funding of $1 billion+ a year until the project is complete, even in this time of escalating Trumponomics.
I always want California to be the “Can Do” state.
Bob Greene
Mountain View
Re: “Newsom reveals mapping gambit” (Page A1, Aug. 15).
California’s redistricting (on the Nov. 4 ballot) may be criticized as a “partisan ploy.” However, that ignores the existential threat to our democracy underway by Donald Trump.
The threat is far beyond partisan politics. At stake: whether we’ll have fair elections ever again, in this country.
Trump already attempted a violent coup d’état (after trying other illegal ways to overturn the 2020 election). Upon returning in 2025, he pardoned the convicted felons of Jan. 6, and he has a green light to commit any other crimes, thanks to the Supreme Court that he stacked in his first term.
Now he’s blatantly rigging the 2026 election. What will be left of our democracy by 2028?
Newsom’s proposed redistricting is a necessary, and temporary, antidote to the Trump coup.
Madge Strong
Willits
Re: “Democrats mull a return to state’s gerrymandered past” (Page A6, Aug. 8).
I always thought the term “gerrymandering” came from the 80s when Gov. Jerry Brown started using it in California.
However, consulting with Webster’s dictionary, it came from the early 1800s when Declaration signer Elbridge Gerry was governor of Massachusetts, and later vice president under James Madison. One of the carved-up voting districts he created looked like the head, tail and four legs of a salamander. Another legislator coined the new word, gerrymander, instead.
In any case, gerrymandering is nothing new.
Ron Knapp
Saratoga
The Democratic and Republican parties lack the characteristics needed to work together and to govern our nation effectively. Their inability to lead and cooperate has caused chaos, division and devastation.
Texas and California are taking steps to redraw their congressional districts in an effort to shift power in Congress. As our country’s name clearly implies, the states that make up the United States must be united. The reality is that the states are divided based on the party that controls each state. Ditto the Congress and Senate. As a result, our nation has achieved ill will, division and hostility.
To build unity and foster national peace and harmony, our state and national leaders must end their rivalries and their false belief that anyone from a different political party is the enemy. Our leaders must work together — regardless of party — to govern and unite this country. There is no other way.
Nick Dellaporta
Santa Clara
Every day, the newspaper is crammed with absurdities, making us wonder if we are living in a Franz Kafka novel.
From Donald Trump’s demand for $1 billion from the California taxpayer-supported UCLA to the crackdown on the Smithsonian Museum to the declaration of a public safety emergency in Washington, D.C., after the robbery of a DOGE employee, the list never ends.
It’s normal to feel despair under crazy circumstances. We must, however, be hopeful and do our best to resist. For example, let’s continue to keep ourselves informed, volunteer to help with voter registration and join peaceful rallies. Taking all these actions doesn’t guarantee change, especially in the short run, but if we don’t do anything, things will certainly go from bad to worse.
Florence Chan
Los Altos
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