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Tag: San Jose State University

  • Fourth annual Day of Remembrance at SJSU emphasizes activism and solidarity

    Gordon Yamate, who serves on the Los Gatos Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Commission, spoke about inspiring solidarity and activism for a panel at this year’s Day of Remembrance of Japanese American incarceration at San Jose State University.

    Feb. 19 nationally commemorates the anniversary of Executive Order 9066, a 1942 decree that ordered the removal of all people of Japanese descent from the West Coast to camps in remote areas of California, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho and Arkansas. San Jose State held an event on that day to acknowledge the Japanese American experience and the campus’ connection to it. In 1942, Yoshihiro Uchida Hall, which used to be the university’s men’s gymnasium, was used as a registration center for Japanese Americans in Santa Clara County before they were sent to the incarceration camps.

    Nollyanne Delacruz

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  • San Jose State University sees record enrollment despite Trump concerns

    San Jose State University welcomed a record number of students for the fall 2025 semester, despite concerns that the Trump administration’s crackdown on higher education would cause a drop in fall enrollment.

    The university said Monday nearly 40,000 students enrolled at San Jose State for the fall semester — an 8% increase from last year and the highest enrollment total for a single academic term in the university’s 168-year history.

    San Jose State also said it welcomed its largest-ever classes of first-year students, transfers and undergraduate students, with more than 5,100 first-year students, 3,600 transfer students and a total of 8,700 new undergraduate students.

    Last year, the university saw a 3.7% increase in total fall enrollment and a 2.8% increase in freshman enrollment for the fall 2024 semester, despite concerns that errors in the federal financial aid form and resulting application delays would cause a widespread drop in enrollment. San Jose State credited last year’s enrollment boost to the university’s proactive workshops, communication and staff efforts to counteract the national error.

    Last year, the California State University system as a whole saw record first-year enrollment for the fall 2024 semester. Preliminary fall enrollment data is typically released in October and finalized in November.

    SJSU said it also saw a record number of students enrolled in its online programs for the fall 2025 semester, with 850 students enrolled — a 30% increase from last year. The university said its professional and continuing education programs — post-secondary learning opportunities for working adults — saw an all-time high of nearly 5,000 students enrolled.

    The announcement comes as San Jose State University is one of many universities across the state and nation facing increasing scrutiny by the Trump administration.

    San Jose State is currently under a federal investigation over a potential civil rights violation for allowing transgender athletes to compete on women’s teams, stemming from national scrutiny the university faced last year when the co-captain of the San Jose State women’s volleyball team joined a lawsuit accusing the NCAA of discriminating against women by allowing transgender women to compete in women’s sports.

    The university has also been impacted by several of the Trump administration’s higher education policy changes, including cuts to research funding, international students’ visa revocations and cuts to students’ financial aid.

    Molly Gibbs

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  • Use solar power, kill a tortoise? Climate change solution carries environmental costs

    Use solar power, kill a tortoise? Climate change solution carries environmental costs

    Dustin Mulvaney, SJSU environmental studies professor, stands at the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on Thurssday, May 2, 2024. Mulvaney believes California has far more than enough alternative space, including parking lots, contaminated land and other areas, that there’s no need for massive solar arrays in pristine areas such as the Mojave Desert. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

    Turn on your toaster, bulldoze a Joshua tree. Flip a light switch, feed an endangered tortoise to a badger.

    Solar power, widely seen as humanity’s best hope for avoiding catastrophic climate change, can carry a heavy environmental cost, depending on where panels and transmission lines are built.

    Some of that infrastructure — providing electricity to millions of Californians — is going into places it should not, says San Jose State University environmental studies professor and sustainable energy expert, Dustin Mulvaney. Killing plants and animals, of course, is not a goal for solar developers, but the collateral damage has sparked bitter debate over where panels and lines belong.

    California has done a good job of protecting its public lands while facilitating solar development, Mulvaney says. But many residents are powering their homes with electricity from Nevada, where pristine natural areas are taking an increasingly hard hit, and from private, California projects in important animal and plant habitats, he says.

    Several “aggregators” — community-based alternatives to utility giants that are often marketed as “clean” — have contracts for power from a Southern California project that would see 4,000 Joshua trees leveled, he says. Other projects feeding aggregators bring significant loss of wildlife habitat.

    Mulvaney believes sacrificing nature for solar is unnecessary. California could meet its electricity needs by putting solar panels on just a tenth of its contaminated sites, old mines, unusable former farmlands, parking lots and other disturbed areas, he says. “We need to be building out our electricity transmission infrastructure toward those sites,” Mulvaney says. The more solar close to major urban areas, the better, he adds. Every home and Amazon warehouse presents another rooftop-solar opportunity, he says.

    This news organization sat down with Mulvaney recently to discuss solar power. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

    Q: Describe the controversy over where to put solar generation facilities?
    A: Most big solar farms are not controversial. They get controversial when they go onto landscapes that are of significance, either ecological significance or cultural significance — sometimes there are important cultural resources for tribes.

    Q: Do we have need for both rooftop solar and utility-scale solar?
    A: We should have more rooftop, but we’re going to need more utility scale based on the way our grid is built.

    Q: Why do we have solar developments and proposals for pristine areas, when already-altered land is available?
    A: Transmission lines are why we see projects where they are. Back in the ’60s we built transmission lines to connect to coal-fired power plants in the western United States. As those coal-fired power plants are turning off, those transmission lines suddenly have power availability. The (planned new) Greenlink transmission line which is going to connect Las Vegas and Reno goes through a Native American site and through a bunch of sensitive ecosystems. And we’re already seeing applications for solar farms along that transmission corridor. That’s going to be power that goes to California, probably. Nevada has fewer protections for its public lands.

    Q: What roles do the big utilities like PG&E and Southern California Edison play in where solar farms go up?
    A: The community choice aggregators are playing a bigger role than the utilities in determining these development patterns now. The community choice aggregators are doing much of the (power) purchasing. For the Yellow Pine solar farm on the Nevada border (to produce electricity for Silicon Valley Clean Energy and Central Coast Community Energy), lots of desert tortoises had to be removed from that site. Forty-something of those tortoises were eaten by badgers right away.

    Q: Could we meet our electricity needs without big solar farms?
    A: There’s nothing theoretically prohibiting rooftop solar and batteries from powering a community. Do you have enough sun? We get those back to back to back to back cyclones in the winter. Sometimes the cloud cover’s all the way across the Central Valley. Do you have enough batteries? The battery storage probably makes that prohibitively expensive at this stage. It would require rethinking how we move power around.

    Q: What do we stand to lose by putting big solar farms in the wilderness?
    A: All sorts of species, old-growth barrel cactus, desert tortoise, kit fox. The desert tortoise just last week was up-listed by the California Department of Fish and Game to be endangered. That species has lost 90% of its population since 1980. Bighorn sheep and pronghorn antelope are impacted by solar farms because their habitat gets fragmented by them. Their populations get more isolated, they have inbreeding.

    Q: Could we meet all our needs without putting solar on undisturbed wilderness?
    A: There’s a great study. You can avoid important lands to conservation and it would only increase the cost of power by 3%, based on their estimates.

    Q: Where are some places where you could put reasonable amounts of solar generation to help avoid bringing power in from the desert or Nevada?
    A: On the western side of the Central Valley a lot of those soils are contaminated with selenium. That would be an area where you could have less impact. That’s where you could put pretty big utility scale projects that would be really close to the Bay Area, and above the bottleneck — California has a (power line capacity) bottleneck for the power, around Los Banos. We have to build more renewables above the bottleneck in northern California to help the Bay Area.

    Q: What about Southern California?
    A: You have a lot of renewables in Southern California already. Southern California just needs more rooftop solar on their warehouses and things like that.

    Ethan Baron

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  • Ex-San Jose State Trainer Pleads Guilty In Sexual Abuse Case

    Ex-San Jose State Trainer Pleads Guilty In Sexual Abuse Case

    Former San Jose State University sports medicine director Scott Shaw has admitted in a plea deal that he sexually abused four female athletes during physical therapy sessions, prosecutors announced this week.

    Shaw, 56, initially faced six misdemeanor counts of abusing his authority in a recent federal trial that resulted in a hung jury — despite the testimony of eight former university athletes. On Tuesday, he reportedly took a deal to avoid retrial by pleading guilty to two of the charges.

    The former trainer faces up to one year in prison for each count and $200,000 in fines.

    “Shaw now has acknowledged his guilt and has admitted the conduct that resulted in the charges that were filed against him,” said prosecutor Patrick Robbins with the U.S. attorney’s office. “We hope his guilty plea and conviction bring some level of solace to his victims, and we now look to sentencing which will be a major step toward bringing this matter to a conclusion.”

    Shaw was sports medicine director from 2008 to 2020 and served as associate director for two years prior, according to USA Today. He was first accused in 2009 by 17 swimmers and divers who reported him to the university, but the school “quietly” cleared Shaw of all wrongdoing, according to a 2020 investigation by the newspaper.

    It was only after the university’s swim coach Sage Hopkins repeatedly re-reported their allegations to school officials — as well as to the NCAA, federal agencies and the Mountain West Conference — that the university finally agreed to reopen the case in December 2019, USA Today reported.

    The eight former athletes who took the stand said Shaw reached inside their shorts and bras to fondle their breasts, groins and buttocks. They said he never asked for consent or explained the reasoning for his supposed treatments, which Shaw never documented, according to USA Today.

    The school ultimately settled alleged Title IX violations with the Justice Department in 2021 and has also reportedly paid more than $7 million to 30 of Shaw’s accusers.

    Prosecutors say Shaw will face his sentencing trial in November.

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