Posts in Special Reports
☆ Can local community colleges compete with online alternatives?

Experienced researcher of CA community colleges Christopher Jepsen breaks down Calbright: the emergent virtual-only CC institution making waves across the Golden State. Jepsen argues that despite online learning's benefits, local Bay Area brick-and-mortar CCs shouldn't be too concerned about "stolen" enrollment. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Mahan's centrist bloc prevails in major housing vote

One of the narratives that's been repeated over and over by local media since Mahan's mayoral win is this: He won't be able to lead a Labor/Left-aligned council. That narrative crashed at the end of April when the moderate council bloc won a 9–2 vote to reject COPA—one of the nonprofit Left's most sought-after policy wishes. Former councilmember and current Planning Commissioner Pierluigi Oliverio breaks down the politics of it all in an Opp Now exclusive interview.

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☆ CM Peter Ortiz falsely accuses colleagues of violent class animosities; Mayor Mahan rebukes him

Any hopes that Sylvia Arenas' exit from the SJ City Council would signal the end of wild comments from the dais were dashed on 4.25 as District 5's CM Peter Ortiz picked up Arenas' mantle with gusto. Ortiz proclaimed that votes against a memo to expand SJ's housing preservation efforts were "violence against working families." Mayor Matt Mahan took exception to Ortiz' incendiary claim, but Ortiz was undeterred. In an Opp Now exclusive, the team unpacks Ortiz’s falsehoods and reframes them to reveal unreasonable hyperbole and unseemly bullying.

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☆ Hey, hey, ho, ho, political art has got to go

The Fallon statue is gone; the Americana painting that arguably glorified violence against the police has similarly disappeared from the Public Square. Good riddance, says Opp Now co-founder Christopher Escher, who posits that the city shouldn't even be in the business of funding political art at all. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ USD board runner: It's time to axe costly DEI positions

Zoila Herrera Rollins ran for Union School District Board this past November to advocate parents' rights and transparency to families. Here, Herrera explains that budgetary accountability within the USD means getting rid of pointless positions (hint: the USD's paying $100k/yr for a DEI expert). After Stanford's free speech disaster, many others, too, are questioning if Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion jobs belong in education. The first of two Opp Now exclusive comments.

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☆ How local Left misleads about why COPA was rejected

Nonprofit advocates and SJ Housing Department staff (oops, did we repeat ourselves?) have struggled for three years to get Council approval for their flawed proposal to privilege local nonprofits when it comes to buying up older properties (it's called COPA). Since a Council economic committee rejected the latest COPA version on 3/27, the spin machine from city staff and nonprofits has shifted into high gear in an effort to restart the broken-down concept. The Opp Now team examines their rhetorical maneuvers in this exclusive

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☆ Constitutional lawyer: No encampment zones are not, if implemented effectively, reason for concern

What does it mean to criminalize homelessness? An expert concludes that Mayor Mahan's proposal to enact no encampment zones across the City doesn't violate unhoused individuals' rights, as some wonder. Jeff Rowes, senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, breaks it down in this Opp Now exclusive: Reasonably regulating public health/safety in no way penalizes homelessness, as long as people are offered alternative housing options (as is integral to Mahan's strategy).

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☆ Perspective: To reach its housing needs, SJ needs to jettison ordinances like the Ellis Act, which constrain densification where we need it most

Local housing provider Dean Hotop cuts to the chase: If SJ wants to preserve its greenbelt (which it should), we need to find ways to build upwards within our Urban Growth Boundary. Outdated ordinances like the Ellis Act—which make it economically infeasible to densify older, low-density properties—stand in the way of an abundant housing supply and common sense, and have to go. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Sen Jones: CA needs SB 31's “compassionate approach” to homelessness

While some local news sites are making outrageously false claims about Senate Bill 31's anti-street squatting stance, Senate Minority Leader Brian W. Jones sets the record straight in this Opp Now exclusive. He explains how SB 31, along with CARE Court, can provide much-needed services to the unhoused while mitigating the negative neighborhood impacts of runaway encampments.

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☆ Khamis: SJ needs holistic homelessness strategies

A recent article in local news labels proposed Senate Bill 31 as “criminalizing homelessness” by making it a misdemeanor to take up residence on sidewalks and streets 1,000 ft. from “sensitive areas.” Past SJ councilmember Johnny Khamis clarifies why effective law enforcement, substance abuse/mental health, and housing solutions must be blended to keep our community's families safe. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ FedSoc pres: If heckling students held accountable, Stanford Law hiring boycott can end

Stanford Law's Federalist Society student president Tim Rosenberger, Jr. speaks to why a few prominent judges have announced they will stop hiring Stanford Law grads. Some are worried this effect will snowball, as with recent years' Yale Law blacklisting. Stanford's solution, according to TRJ, must involve thoughtful hiring and student discipline decisions. An exclusive from Opp Now, the only local publication covering the Stanford Law circus fully.

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Population drain: SCC losing 32K residents/yr on avg

SF Standard’s Maryann Jones Thompson reports on the latest data about 2020–2022 population losses in Bay Area counties. Second only to SF County (which boasts a -7.5% change), Santa Clara County has seen 3.4% of its residents make a quick getaway post-2020—as Texas areas continue gaining, some counties even by 10–18%.

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