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BY ADRIANA HERNANDEZ Daily Post Staff Writer
COLORADO SHOOTING: A student shot two of his peers yesterday at a suburban Denver high school before shooting himself and later dying, authorities said. The handgun shooting was reported around 12:30 p.m. at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colo. The teens were originally listed in critical condition, but by early evening one was in stable condition, according to the hospital’s trauma director.
HARRIS SAYS DEMS RECKLESS:
Ex-Vice President Kamala Harris says it was reckless for Democrats to let [See THE UPDATE, page 4]
East Palo Alto Councilman Carlos Romero has been removed from multiple committees and board until June 2026, during a heated meeting yesterday where he was reprimanded for calling another councilman “deaf and dumb.”
Council members Martha Barragan, Mark Dinan and Webster Lincoln voted to remove Romero from the six boards he serves on, and next year’s mayor [See REBUKED, page 26]
SIGNS ON BOTH SIDES — Supporters and detractors of EPA Councilman Carlos Romero showed up with signs yesterday. Post photo by Adriana Hernandez. THURSDAY, September 11, 2025
Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist and close ally of President Donald Trump who played an influential role in rallying young Republican voters, was shot and killed yesterday at a Utah college event in what the governor called a political assassination carried out from a rooftop.
“This is a dark day for our state. It’s a tragic day for our nation,” said Utah Gov. Spencer Cox. “I want to be very clear this is a political assassination.”
No one was in custody yesterday, though authorities were searching for a new person of interest, according to a law enforcement official familiar with
the matter who was not authorized to discuss the situation by name and spoke on condition of anonymity. Authorities had earlier provided evolving information on the status of the search, with FBI Director Kash Patel initially saying on social media that a “subject” had been taken into custody, only to later say the person had been released after being questioned.
Authorities did not immediately identify the person who had been in custody, a motive or any criminal charge.
But the circumstances of the shooting drew renewed attention to an escalating threat of political violence in the United States that in the last several years has cut across the ideological spectrum. The assassination drew bipartisan condemnation, but a national
[See KIRK, page 26]
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Supe admonishes group home neighbors
BY ADRIANA HERNANDEZ
Daily Post Staff Writer
After a group of North Fair Oaks residents protested the county’s purchase of a home in their neighborhood for youth housing, Supervisor Noelia Corzo said she was disappointed by the outcry.
“They’re not bad people. They’re not bad kids who nobody wanted. They, through no fault of their own, have had struggles forced upon them,” Corzo said on Tuesday before the board approved the purchase of the $2 million home at 3335 Spring St.
The county is purchasing the single-family home to use as a home for foster youth who are too old to continue in the foster care program but need somewhere to live while they transition to independent living.
Previous meeting
At the board’s Aug. 26 meeting, a group of residents went to the micro-
phone to tell the board that the county hadn’t been communicative enough about the purchase and some residents saying they’re worried about safety in the neighborhood.
Resident Angelica Zavala told the board in a letter ahead of its Aug. 26 meeting that with the limited information the neighborhood had received, she was worried about their safety.
“Due to the lack of information ... the community has received, we do not have any data that adding a housing facility would not create additional crime,” Zavala wrote. “While the county’s proposal may be well intentioned, it does not serve to benefit our neighborhood, our community, the safety of the children and residents.”
The people who will be moving in deserve a safe place to call home and are at the age where they will make mistakes and need to be supported through those mistakes, Corzo said.
Corzo told residents to think about how they would want their kids, if they were transitioning out of foster care, to be treated.
“If I was a young person and I was aware this debate was happening, I would be very hurt and I would feel stepped on when life has already stepped on me so much,” Corzo said.
Neighborhood is nervous
Resident Lisa Martinez said on Tuesday that it’s not that the community isn’t sympathetic, but they are nervous about the change.
Resident Mary Hollander said she doesn’t believe there was enough outreach to the neighbor and has unanswered questions.
Hollander asked what steps would be taken in response to bad behavior.
“Parking is horrible here, so how do you plan to address the situation?” Maria Fraboni said.
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Most of the people who will be living in the home do not own cars, according to the county’s website.
Supervisor Lisa Gauthier said the county wanted to use this particular house because it has six bedrooms and four bathrooms and is near Menlo-Atherton High School and multiple bus lines.
The nonprofit StarVista used to have a location at 639 Douglas Ave. in Redwood City where young adults aging out of foster services could stay. But StarVista closed last month, leaving the young adults with nowhere to go, according to the county.
Gauthier said that real estate doesn’t wait for anyone, and the county couldn’t delay the purchase any longer.
The home has six bedrooms, allowing the county to start with six people living there for the first six months. The home has four bathrooms and a two-car garage.
THE UPDATE FROM PAGE 1
President Biden decide whether to seek reelection last year. But in an excerpt of Harris’ new book she defends Biden’s ability to do the job. In an excerpt of “107 Days” published yesterday in The Atlantic, Harris writes it was “recklessness” that she and others left the decision about Biden continuing his campaign up to him and first lady Jill Biden. It’s the first time Harris has been publicly critical of Biden’s decision to run again.
COOK CAN STAY: The White House insists President Trump “lawfully removed” Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook despite a court ruling she can remain in her position while she fights efforts to fire her. Tuesday’s ruling is a blow to the Trump administration’s efforts to assert more control over the Fed and will almost certainly be appealed. The Republican president said he was firing Cook over allegations she committed mortgage fraud related to properties she bought in Michigan and Georgia before she joined the Fed.
RICHEST MEN FLIP-FLOP: The battle among billionaires for bragging rights as the world’s richest person got heated yesterday with the surprising surge of an old contender: Larry Ellison. In a stunning few minutes of trading early in the day, stock in Oracle, the software giant that he co-founded, rocketed more than a third, enough to temporarily wrest the title from longtime holder Elon Musk. But by the end of the day Musk was back on top, according to wealth tracker Bloomberg, as Oracle gave a bit of its gains. Musk is now worth $384.2 billion versus $383.2 billion for Ellison.
Lucile Packard Hospital in Palo Alto: Feb. 20
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Feb. 17
Zoe Valentina Aguilar Giron, a girl
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Ada Valentina Bunker, a girl
Maximilian He, a boy
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Philippos Andreas Karatarakis, a boy
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Feb. 16
Aria Sangwan Agrawal, a girl
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Arthur Liu, a boy
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Feb. 15
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County: Recent fire was close to being far worse
Agencies that responded to last month’s Edgewood Fire that burned 10 acres along Interstate 280 in Woodside discussed the details of what could have been a more disastrous blaze during a San Mateo County Board of Supervisors meeting.
County Executive Mike Callagy said on Tuesday that he asked the board to discuss the events surrounding the fire to highlight how without a swift, multi-agency response, the fire had the potential to be far more destructive.
The fire is “a stark reminder of what can take place very quickly,” he said. “This is a car fire that jumped 280 and threatened Canada College and some of the residents in the area.”
The blaze erupts
with the Woodside Fire Protection District, during the presentation.
The fire district elevated the call from a second-alarm fire to a thirdalarm fire as strong wind gusts began spreading embers across I-280 and igniting the grasslands on the freeway’s opposite side. Fires in the third-alarm category are deemed significant fires that require additional resources and specialized equipment to be contained.
“Once the fire hit the top of the hill, it got taken by a gust of wind that spread it to the center divide,” Nannini said. “It worked its way down the center divide into the gore point on the Farm Hill southbound on-ramp, jumped again and moved across that on-ramp to the freeway.”
tankers and two helicopters were deployed to surveil the area and dump thousands of gallons of water and fire retardant.
While the fire was not determined to be life-threatening, several homes in the surrounding neighborhood were evacuated as a precaution, according to the county Department of Emergency Management.
Fire progress stops
Around 6 p.m., the fire stopped progressing. It burned 10 acres in total.
“I think we lost three fence posts and we cut chains to get through to some properties,” Nannini said. “So no real significant property loss at all.”
Closures, evacuations
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Just before 5 p.m. on Aug. 30, emergency dispatch received a call that a vegetation fire had broken out near the Farm Hill Boulevard on-ramp to northbound I-280. The fire, which started from a car’s mechanical issue, began to grow and threaten Canada College and several homes nearby.
Upon arrival, the flames were “moving uphill towards the college at a moderate rate of speed,” said Vince Nannini, battalion chief
The CHP closed both directions of I-280. With the fire surrounding both sides of the freeway, it was elevated to a four-alarm blaze to help protect Canada College and homes in proximity.
Cal Fire’s CZU Unit, the CHP, San Mateo County Fire Department, Redwood City Fire Department and other agencies worked together in response.
One tactical aircraft, two air
Shruti Dhapodkar, director of the county’s Department of Emergency Management, acknowledged that the robust response and moderate weather conditions helped prevent what could have been a more destructive fire.
“I think we are very lucky that the relative humidity was somewhat higher, the wind speed was 2 to 3 miles per hour,” she said at the meeting. “This was an area where there were eucalyptus trees, and that causes a lot of smoke, so we were lucky.”
Supes back redistricting effort
The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors has approved a resolution declaring support for state Proposition 50, a ballot measure that would allow the temporary redrawing of congressional districts in California.
Proposition 50, also known as the Election Rigging Response Act, was crafted by Gov. Gavin Newsom as a direct response to Texas’ congressional redistricting to favor Republicans. Proponents of Prop. 50 allege that Texas moved to gerrymander because Republicans believe they cannot do well in upcoming midterm elections in 2026, which could return power to Democrats. Backers of the proposition believe that it will give Democrats a level play-
ing field when state representatives are elected to Congress.
Four ‘yes’ votes
San Mateo County is the latest among several local governments in the state to weigh in on the proposition. The board moved forward with formally endorsing Prop. 50 at Tuesday’s regular meeting with four ‘yes’ votes and one abstaining vote. Board President David Canepa and District 4 Supervisor Lisa Gauthier co-sponsored the resolution.
“Texas and President Trump cannot silence California,” Canepa said. “This is a stand against election rigging and a signal to the entire world that we here in the Golden State are ready to fight for
democracy and fight against authoritarianism with every tool we have, including the ballot box.”
Mueller abstains
District 3 Supervisor Ray Mueller, who participated virtually due to being sick, decided to abstain from voting, citing what he sees as political bias in Prop. 50.
“I am going to abstain on this resolution,” he said. “Proposition 50’s underlying purpose is plainly partisan, to favor one political party over another in the redrawing of Congressional District lines.”
While he intended to vote on the resolution, he believes that the board should not weigh in on matters that appear to side with one political party.
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$10K reward set in 2019 shooting
A victim advocate nonprofit is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Juan Carlos Solis, the suspect in a 2019 East Palo Alto shooting that left a Menlo Park man dead.
East Palo Alto Police have identified Solis in the killing of Victor Gomez-Rios, 24, who was found shot in his car on the 1800 block of East Bayshore Road on Sept. 7, 2019.
Solis remains at large. He was identified after an extensive investigation, according to a statement from Chief Jeff Liu.
The reward was announced by the nonprofit group Mothers Against Murder in partnership with the East Palo Alto Police Department.
‘Transaction’ killing
In 2019, police said Gomez-Rios was killed during an “illegal transaction.” Then-Chief Al Pardini told the Post that his officers had a pretty good idea of who the perpetrator was.
Police are asking anyone with information to contact investigators at (650) 321-1112 or leave an anonymous tip at (650) 409-6792.
DA: Man defrauds church
A Los Angeles man who posed as both a pastor and an attorney has been charged with defrauding parishioners at a San Francisco church of more than $400,000, the District Attorney’s Office said.
Prosecutors alleged that Kenny Man Wong, 56, presented himself as “Dr. Wong” while serving as a visiting pastor at a church on 19th Avenue in the Sunset District, beginning in 2018. Us-
ing that position of trust, he allegedly offered legal services to parishioners, claiming ties to prestigious universities and assuring them he was handling their cases.
Wong has never been licensed to practice law in California and did not provide the promised legal services, according to court records. Instead, he allegedly used the money to buy a home in Southern California.
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BY ADRIANA HERNANDEZ Daily Post Staff Writer
Menlo Park may have to pay its pool operator more to run the city’s two pools.
Pool operator Tim Sheeper, the CEO of Menlo Swim and Sport, wants the city to pay him an additional $200,000 or reduce the hours the Belle Haven Pool is open.
Differing views
Council members Drew Combs, Jeff Schmidt and Jennifer Wise were interested in paying Sheeper more to allow for the Belle Haven pool at Kelly Park, 100 Terminal Ave., to be open 44 weeks of the year.
But Vice Mayor Betsy Nash said she wants to learn more about the pool’s finances before making any decision.
“I don’t like being in this position. We have a pool operator that, despite getting all of the maintenance free, all the pool usage free… is still losing money. I don’t feel that adding more city money to an operator that is in this situation is a good financial decision,” Nash said.
The Burgess Pool has lost $67,000 this year and is hoping to break even
next year, according to Menlo Swim and Sport Chief Financial Officer Carole Hayworth.
But Schmidt said that it would be a big mistake for the city to start from the ground up instead of working with the options Sheeper provided.
“There’s no universe where I’m voting for getting rid of an operator that the community supports,” Schmidt said. “There is no way I’m going to vote for blowing this thing up.”
Schmidt said he’s worried that if the majority of the council doesn’t make up its mind, Sheeper will walk away.
Resident weighs in
Resident Nina Wouk said she felt residents were getting the short end of the stick in the options council reviewed.
“I would really feel more confident about all this talk about how (Sheeper is) losing money, if there were real financial statements showing the revenue and not just the lump of expenses,” Wouk said, asking for it to be accessible for both council and the community.
The council will discuss the pool situation at its Sept. 30 meeting.
Times shown are when a report was made to police. Information is from police department logs. All of the people named here are innocent until proven guilty in court.
PALO ALTO
AUG. 30
1:47 p.m. — Samira Shawwa, 46, of Alameda, arrested for shoplifting, Stanford Shopping Center.
3:15 p.m. — Bicycle stolen, 300 block of Panama Mall.
6:24 p.m. — Assault, 400 block of Jane Stanford Way.
MENLO PARK
TUESDAY
7:55 a.m. — Petty theft, 300 block of Constitution Drive.
7:37 a.m. — Vandalism, 900 block of Hamilton Ave.
3:06 p.m. — Emelina Huertas, 30, of Pacifica, cited for driving with a suspended or revoked license, Bayfront Expressway and Chrysler Drive.
3:21 p.m. — Miguel Sanchez, 36, transient, arrested for trespassing and evading police in a vehicle, University Ave. at the railroad tracks.
7:14 p.m. — Everth A. Ramos Tovar, 22, of East Palo Alto, cited for driving with a suspended or revoked license, 1100 block of Alma St.
10:10 p.m. — Michael C. Gonzalez, 28, transient, arrested on a warrant, 600 block of Santa Cruz Ave.
11:24 p.m. — Battery, 1600 block of El Camino.
LOS ALTOS
FRIDAY
12:53 a.m. — Ascension Martinez, 35, of Los Altos, cited for drug possession, 1900 block of W. El Camino.
TUESDAY
5:06 p.m. — Battery, 4800 block of El Camino.
MOUNTAIN VIEW
JULY 16
1:25 a.m. — Christopher Vincent, 45, of Mountain View, cited for DUI, San Antonio and E. Bayshore roads.
AUG. 28
2:29 a.m. — Juan Herrera Diaz, 40, of San Jose, cited for possession of drug paraphernalia, 100 block of Castro St.
AUG. 31
3:05 p.m. — Battery at YMCA, 2400 Grant Road.
5:55 p.m. — Mary Kelly, 59, arrested for DUI, driving with a suspended or revoked license and on warrants, 500 block of N. Shoreline Blvd.
9:47 p.m. — Vehicle hits a pedestrian, a 64-year-old Mountain View man, El Camino and Miramonte Ave. He is taken to a hospital. The driver, 23-year-old Eva Lerner of Los Altos Hills, is arrested for DUI that causes injuries.
SEPT. 1
1:09 a.m. — Yesenia Gomez Jimenez, 21, of Mountain View, arrested for public drunkenness, 900 block of E. El Camino.
2:14 a.m. — Brayan Hernandez Vinalay, 21, of Monterey, cited for DUI, Villa and Franklin streets.
7:28 a.m. — Home burglary, 100 block of Minaret Ave.
10:23 a.m. — Vehicle stolen, E. Charleston and San Antonio roads.
4:23 p.m. — Vandalism, 1-99 block of Evandale Ave.
SEPT. 2
12:02 a.m. — Theft at Walmart, 600 Showers Drive.
12:26 a.m. — Battery in a parking lot, 800 block of California St.
4:29 a.m. — Victoria Falcon, 23, of Mountain View, arrested for battery, vandalism and probation violation, 2500 block of Leghorn St.
11:40 a.m. — Home burglary, 100 block of Holly Court.
NORTH FAIR OAKS
SATURDAY
2:37 a.m. — Rodrigo Gallardo Gonzalez, 43, of Redwood City, cited for possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia and theft of someone else’s lost property, Bay Road and Second Ave.
SUNDAY
1:28 a.m. — Jesus Dan Rios Tapia, 34, of Oakland, arrested for public drunkenness, 300 block of Fifth Ave.
3:02 a.m. — After responding to a noise complaint, sheriff’s deputies notice several people sitting at picnic tables with open containers of alcohol well after the allowed time, 2500 block of El Camino. The drinkers leave through the back of the business.
11 a.m. — Daniel Conception Nava, 37, of Redwood City, cited on a warrant, 700 block of Third Ave.
5:15 p.m. — Leonardo Torres Naranjo, 59, of Redwood City, cited for driving with a suspended or revoked license, Spring St. and Second Ave.
7:45 p.m. — Arturo Gonzalez, 61, of Redwood City, cited for possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia, Third Ave. and Bay Road.
REDWOOD CITY
SATURDAY
11:39 a.m. — Trailer stolen, Seaport Blvd.
3:06 p.m. — Caller says a drunken driver was weaving in and out of lanes and also threw a bottle of alcohol at the caller’s vehicle, Vera Ave. Yesica Deras, 35, arrested for DUI and hitand-run.
5:01 p.m. — Two men steal items from a store, Lathrop St.
5:53 p.m. — Two surfboards stolen, Arguello St.
6 p.m. — Arsenio Gonzalez Sian, 24, of Redwood City, arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia and
on a warrant, Broadway and California St.
8:25 p.m. — Caller says a person threw a large rock at the window of the caller’s vehicle, Chestnut St.
SUNDAY
2:23 a.m. — Skateboarder injured by a vehicle in a hit-and-run, Woodside Road.
2:13 p.m. — Man tries to steal meds from a store but dumps them out when confronted by security, El Camino.
8:48 p.m. — Window of a business shattered, El Camino.
8:58 p.m. — Man who seems high and is wearing a rolled-up ski mask as a beanie is telling people he is a federal agent, Broadway.
9:07 p.m. — Man seen pushing his female partner in a parking lot. Location not disclosed.
SAN CARLOS
SATURDAY
4:21 a.m. — Man reported to be rummaging through unlocked vehicles, 3100 block of La Mesa Drive. Nothing is reported stolen.
SUNDAY
9:34 p.m. — People reported to be camping in a park, 500 block of Old County Road. Francis Chang Vasquez, 31, of Redwood City, cited for resisting police by refusing to identify himself.
BELMONT
TUESDAY
5:23 a.m. — Pickup truck stolen, Gordon Ave.
9:50 p.m. — Naser Eghdami, 64, cited for display of false vehicle registration, 800 block of Ralston Ave.
CHP
From the Redwood City office of the CHP, which covers the Mid-Peninsula.
JUNE 21
Alejandro J. Meraz, 27, arrested for DUI.
Israel J. Sandoval, 47, arrested for DUI.
Carlos E. Perez-Gonzalez, 25, arrested for DUI.
Eligio O. Romero, 39, arrested for DUI.
JUNE 22
Mohammad S. Khan, 33, arrested for DUI and narcotics possession. Rosa Magana Garcia, 25, arrested for DUI.
JUNE 23
Ramon D. Martinez Gregorio, 39, arrested for DUI and driving with a suspended or revoked license.
JUNE 24
Amy N. Scanlan, 40, arrested for driving under the influence of drugs.
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PALO ALTO
4173 El Camino Real #13, 94306, 3 bedrooms, 1730 square feet, built in 1992, Lenbergs Living Trust to Jinliang and Min Li for $1,852,500, closed Aug. 12
654 Loma Verde Ave., 94306, 2 bedrooms, 1052 square feet, built in 1961, Anderson Trust to Yangge and Yu Luo for $2,170,000, closed Aug. 12
560 Arastradero Road, 94306, 3 bedrooms, 2190 square feet, built in 1982, Kang Family Trust to Jinah and David Park for $2,870,000, closed Aug. 12
3503 Alma Village Circle, 94306, 4 bedrooms, 2297 square feet, built in 2013, Xiangyang Lian to Ling and Ling Liu for $3,110,000, closed Aug. 11 (last sale: $2,820,000, 04-20-18)
EAST PALO ALTO
1871 Woodland Ave., 94303, 2 bedrooms, 950 square feet, built in 1938, Woodland Park Property Owner LLC to Xiujuan Dong for $975,000, closed July 22 (last sale: $310,000, 02-18-16)
MENLO PARK
1246 Hoover St., 94025, 3 bedrooms, 1560 square feet, built in 2001, Susan Eline to Boothroyd-Krebs Family Trust for $2,700,000, closed July 22 (last sale: $2,375,000, 06-22-21)
2047 Sharon Road,
94025, 3 bedrooms, 1630 square feet, built in 1959, Super Amazing Capital LLC to Shiou and Chenghan Hsieh for $3,300,000, closed July 21 (last sale: $2,500,000, 11-22-24)
ATHERTON
82 Mulberry Lane, 94027, 4 bedrooms, 2340 square feet, built in 1957, A Domingo to 82 Mulberry LLC for $8,000,000, closed July 24
MOUNTAIN VIEW
462 Mountain Laurel Court, 94043, 3 bedrooms, 1610 square feet, built in 1988, Karl Skiden to Fei and Zhepu Zhao for $1,700,000, closed Aug. 15 (last sale: $1,715,000, 04-18-21)
1638 Tyler Park Way, 94040, 3 bedrooms, 1196 square feet, built in 1955, Ranney Living Trust to Jingyun and Nima Aghli for $1,900,000, closed Aug. 11
2350 Toledo Terrace, 94043, 3 bedrooms, 1651 square feet, built in 2020, Arhana Chattopadhyay to George Luk for $1,948,000, closed Aug. 11 (last sale: $1,983,000, 07-11-21)
324 Cherokee Loop, 94043, 3 bedrooms, 1893 square feet, built in 2018, Battles Living Trust to David Fontaine for $2,100,000, closed Aug. 15 (last sale: $1,987,500, 05-31-19)
LOS ALTOS
1328 Rossway Court, 94024, 4 bedrooms, 2168 square feet, built in 1956, Deppmeier Family Trust to
Elrfd Trust for $3,700,000, closed Aug. 12
510 Valencia Drive, 94022, 3 bedrooms, 1884 square feet, built in 1953, Survivor and C. Conner to Jing and Fei Xia for $4,826,500, closed Aug. 13
REDWOOD CITY
141 Clinton St., 94062, 2 bedrooms, 930 square feet, built in 1923, Womans Redwood to Acosta Living Trust for $1,050,000, closed July 24
1105 Sanchez Way, 94061, 4 bedrooms, 1959 square feet, built in 1954, Tiedemann Family Trust to Jessica Family Trust for $1,198,000, closed July 23
1002 Alameda de las Pulgas, 94061, 3 bedrooms, 1080 square feet, built in 1953, Peter and Marie Smith to Laura and Trevor Gould for $1,750,000, closed July 22 (last sale: $1,575,000, 08-26-21)
SAN CARLOS
708 Neal Ave., 94070, 3 bedrooms, 1540 square feet, built in 1951, Leavenworth Family Trust to Isabelle and Zifeng Huang for $2,100,000, closed July 23 (last sale: $657,500, 02-15-00)
BELMONT
400 El Camino Real #311, 94002, 1 bedroom, 883 square feet, built in 2019, Michael Voskoboynik to KoFang Chang for $870,000, closed July 23 (last sale: $845,000, 03-21-19)
DON’T MISS
Single-level light-filled 4-bed, 2.5-bath home for 2,657 +/- sf of living space
Large lot with 48,292 +/- sf and MFA of 5,731 sf/MDA of 13,134 sf
Hardwood floors in dining room and 3 bedrooms
Spacious kitchen with dining area and adjacent family room with wet bar
Expansive primary suite with multiple closets and large dressing area
Office/4th bedroom with built-in cabinetry
Detached 2-car garage
Excellent Los Altos schools; Gardner Bullis Elementary, Ardis G. Egan Middle, and Los Altos High (Buyer to verify enrollment)
• Freshly updated classic ranch home with pool and spa On the edge of Old Los Altos just a half mile from the Village
• Beautiful corner lot of more than one-quarter acre (approximately 11,430 square feet)
• 3 bedrooms and 2.5 baths
• Approximately 2,109 square feet
• Attached 2-car garage plus lots of off-street parking
• Fresh paint inside and out
• Private rear yard with pool and elevated spa, expansive patio, and fruit trees
• Excellent Los Altos schools
Stunning Aptos Home With Sweeping Ocean Views
John sold this home for $2,873 per square foot versus the 2024 average of $1,623 across Los Altos Hills sales with other listing agents.
Curious what your home might command in today’s market? Call John today for a no obligation consultation of your home to see what he did differently to get these results for his clients Discover the difference a tailored
John sold this newly built home for $2,873 per square foot — outperforming the average of $1,858 per square foot for homes zero to five years old. That’s an impressive $1,015 more per square foot , delivering over $4,250,000 in additional value to his client at close.
Award-Winning Author Patty McGuigan to Launch New Book, Scraps Build a Pile: Forging a Path in Silicon Valley Commercial Real Estate
As Silicon Valley transformed from orchards to innovation hub, Patty McGuigan was there— carving a path in commercial real estate brokerage. For over four decades, she closed high-stakes deals in the Valley with grit, wit, and an inimitable flair. Her new book, Scraps Build a Pile, chronicles her adventures in a dynamic industry dominated by developers, tech giants, and power players.
Patty McGuigan will be discussing Scraps Build a Pile and signing copies of her book at the launch event on Thursday, September 18, 2025. To learn more, please visit pattymcguigan.com.
GRIFFO DISTILLERY, FOUNDED 2013 IN Sonoma County, specializes in premium “scientifically crafted” spirits and
Volunteers Needed
contract distillation. They are driven to lift and defy expectations of flavor through ingenuity and precision. Griffo is one of over a dozen distilleries represented at the Los Altos Whiskey & Bites Stroll tomorrow, September 12th, 6 to 9 p.m., and will be pouring Stout Barreled Bourbon Whiskey, Stony Point Whiskey and Still Waldos Single Malt Whiskey - a special release in collaboration with Lagunitas Brewing Company. The Stroll also features delicious bites from local favorite eateries including Aurum, El Comal, Konjoe Burger, Miko’s Calitalia, Pompeii Ristorante, State of Mind, The Penny Ice-Creamery and The Post.
CLASSIC & CUSTOM CAR SHOW, sponsored by the Rotary Club of San Mateo, will be held this Saturday, September 13 from 9 a.m to 3 p.m. at 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd. in San Mateo. Get ready to see a stunning lineup of classic and custom cars! There will be live music and local vendors.
“One hundred percent of the proceeds go to our scholarship foundation,” said past Redwood City Fire Chief Ray Iverson. Iverson noted that 2025 marks San Mateo Rotary’s 101st anniversary and said the club has been raising funds for scholarships for more than 25 years. Visit rotaryclubofsanmateo.com for more information.
(COAST: Chinese Older Adults Study)
Older Chinese adults are one of the fastest growing populations in the US, but whether
how the brain ages in older Chinese Adults.
Your participation will help us improve future early detection of aging related brain diseases. 55-95 years old
Must be able to speak, listen, read, and write Chinese (Mandarin); Can be bilingual (No requirement for
Must be willing to have brain MRI
Volunteers will be asked to (all tests are free):
Visit Locus Center at 1201 Welch Rd, Stanford, CA 94305 for brain MRI (1hr)
Visit CogT Lab at 1070 Arastradero Rd, Palo (1.5 hr) and blood draw (20 CC) (30 min)
A $50 check will be awarded for completion of the test, thanking you for your participation
To learn more, please contact the CogT Lab at: Call: (650) 736-6731 or Email: oceanna@stanford.edu For complaints, concerns, or participant’s rights, contact 1-866-680-2906
FIND THE PERFECT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL FOR YOUR CHILD! The Center for Children and Youth, a division of JFCS, will host the 15th Annual Peninsula Private Elementary School Fair this Sunday, September 14, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 200 Channing Avenue in Palo Alto. Meet representatives from more than 30 private and independent elementary schools on the Peninsula— all in one place. Children are welcome, light snacks will be provided, and the first 100 families to arrive will receive a printed guide to participating
schools. Questions? Please email Wendy Askenas at wendya@jfcs.org and register today at ccy.jfcs.org/ SchoolFair.
AMERICAN LEATHER SLEEPER SALE. Now through Sept. 22. Give your guests the experience of no bars, no springs, just pure comfort. Visit Bedroom & More, an independent furniture store specializing in luxury sleepers, sofas and recliners by American Leather. Kevin is more than happy to help you find a new piece of furniture that you are sure to love. They even provide white-glove delivery service by their trained and courteous delivery team. Bedroom & More is located at 280 El Camino Real in San Carlos. Call Kevin at (650) 226-3688.
PALO ALTO AIRPORT DAY. The Palo Alto Airport Association is excited to announce the return of their community open house, Palo Alto Airport Day on Sunday, Sept. 28th from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 1903 Embarcadero Rd. The event is free to all attendees and everyone is welcome to attend! Exhibits include airplane and helicopter displays, aircraft flyovers, food trucks, local businesses, a bounce house for kids, and a flying car! Pilots can come see both new and vintage aircraft and the public will enjoy learning what it takes to become a pilot and learning about the numerous benefits our local airport brings to the community.
SINCE 1973 CANYON INN HAS BEEN a neighborhood gathering spot for birthdays, events,
team parties, or just a fun place for a burger and a beer. If you need a break from cooking and you like good burgers, head over to 587 Canyon Road in Redwood City. It has a great atmosphere, including old 49ers memorabilia that will take you back to your childhood. For more information, please call (650) 369-1646.
fresh out seafood, yummy side dishes, crisp salads, mudpie dessert and a world class wine list. Lunch is served Monday through Friday and Dinner is served everyday. Call Olivia at (650) 321-6798 for a reservation and check the website for more info. Sundance the Steakhouse is located near Stanford University at 1921 El Camino Real.
WE’RE AT SUNDANCE THE STEAKHOUSE where Olivia greets you and seats you in one of the peninsula’s finest restaurants. A classic, traditional American cuisine restaurant that has been serving Palo Alto for over 50 years. Slow roasted prime rib is the specialty of the house. Sundance is known for thick cuts of rib,
THE PENNY ICE CREAMERY IS serving Whiskey Custard icecream at the Los Altos Whiskey & Bites Stroll on Friday September 12th, 6-9pm. Made from scratch, The Penny combines fresh local ingredients in small batches to create delicious artisanal ice-cream. Located at State Street Market, The Penny is one of 24 tasting sites throughout Downtown serving either spirits or gourmet delights at the Stroll. Participating distilleries include Sagamore Spirit, Uncle Nearest, Cyrus Noble Bourbon, 10th Street Distillery, Fog’s End Distillery and many more. Details and tickets at downtownlosaltos.org
Entertainment
‘Downton Abbey’ finale a fine farewell
BY JOCELYN NOVECK Associated Press Writer
Change comes slowly to the Downton Abbey universe and its Crawley family. Just watch Robert Crawley go flat-hunting in London.
Wait, what? FLAT-HUNTING? The Earl of Grantham? Well, yes, and it’s the most amusing scene in “Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale” (a self-announcing title if there ever was one).
Just look at proud and starched Robert (Hugh Bonneville), trying to be open-minded but utterly flummoxed by this “flat” in which you cannot go “up” to bed because there is no “up.” Well, you can go “along” to bed, suggests daughter Mary (Michelle Dockery, as always the sensible one).
But the prospect of flat-living — rather than maintaining a mansion in London — is a thing the Crawleys must consider as they move into the 1930s, with financial and social instability always around the corner. “Families like us need to keep moving to survive,” says Mary, with the weight of Downton Abbey’s future itself resting on her shoulders.
The setup
We begin in London’s West End, at a show by Noel Coward, attended by Downton inhabitants from all levels.
They’re all there to watch dashing actor Guy Dexter (Dominic West), who in the last movie asked former butler Thomas Barrow to become his dresser, and more. It’s nice to see Barrow is happy now, able to live life as a gay man — even if Robert can’t quite grasp their relationship (change is slow, remember).
Meanwhile Mary is shopping in London with sister Edith and finds a sleek red satin gown that is quite possibly the most smashing outfit we’ve seen yet.
But when she puts it on for a society ball, trouble erupts. As the family arrives we learn that Mary’s divorce decree has come through — and this
means, alas, that she will become a pariah.
Soon enough we’re back at Downton, and there is one very big difference: no longer does Violet Crawley, aka Maggie Smith, with her inimitable style and those hilarious quips, rule the halls. She died in the last film — and Smith died in 2024. But the film is dedicated to her in more ways than one.
Faces new and old
Besides Violet, almost everyone is back, and we have a few new (or newly returning) characters as well. Paul Giamatti is, happily, back from the TV show as Harold, the brother of Cora
(Elizabeth McGovern, always a warm presence as Robert’s American wife).
Harold arrives from America with some unfortunate news — he’s wasted away much of their family fortune. Accompanying him is friend Gus, a handsome and clever type — or so it seems — who has been advising Harold on his finances. Gus (Alessandro Nivola) worms his way into Mary’s good graces.
Then there’s Simon Russell Beale as the pompous Hector, who tries to hold onto local tradition but runs up against Isobel (Penelope Wilton), and a charming Arty Froushan as Noel Coward himself.
“Sometimes I feel that the past is a more comfortable place than the future,” someone says in a poignant moment. But this final movie will give loyal Downton fans what they want: a satisfying bit of closure and the sense that the future, though a bit scary, may look kindly on Downton Abbey as long as Mary is in charge. And as long as Smith’s Violet, imposing in a front-hall portrait, is looking down from above.
Release info
“Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale,” a Focus Features release in theaters tomorrow, has been rated PG “for suggestive material, smoking and some thematic elements.“ Running time: 123 minutes.
THE CRAWLEYS — Laura Carmichael, from left, Harry Hadden-Paton, Elizabeth McGovern, Hugh Bonneville and Michelle Dockery in a scene from “Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.” Focus Features via AP.
New David Bowie archive launches
When David Bowie died in 2016, he left a vast musical legacy — and a trove of unrealized projects.
Tantalizing details of those abandoned and unfinished ideas are revealed in Bowie’s archive, which opens to the public this week.
The 90,000 items acquired from Bowie’s estate by London’s Victoria and Albert Museum include handwritten notes for a movie in which Major Tom, the fictional astronaut “sitting in a tin can far above the world” in Bowie’s song “Space Oddity,” is sent to “a disgruntled America.”
Curator Madeleine Haddon said the unmade film — titled “Young Americans,” like Bowie’s 1975 album of the same name — is “reflective on what it’s like to be a Brit in the U.S., and thinking about international politics and their place in the world.”
Other might-have-beens include “The Spectator,” a stage musical about an 18th-century London outlaw that Bowie was working on shortly before his death from cancer in January 2016 at the age of 69.
It’s about “the relationship between art and politics in London at the cusp of modernity,” Haddon said yesterday at a preview of V&A’s David Bowie Centre. “I would love to see where he was going with that.”
Treasure trove for fans
The center, which opens Saturday, is a treasure chest for Bowie fans and researchers, holding everything from stage outfits and musical instruments — a stringed Japanese koto, Ziggy Star-
dust’s acoustic guitar — to letters, lyrics, photos, to-do lists and idea-filled sticky notes.
The archive chronicles five decades of restless creativity by the shape-shifting musician, who was born plain old David Jones in the London suburbs in 1947.
Harriet Reed, a theater and performance curator at the V&A, said Bowie was “an active archivist” of his life and work.
“The notes he made, the to-do list, things where he’s making a record of the exhibitions he wants to see, the films he wants to see, books he wants to read — that kind of devouring of culture is really fascinating,” she said.
An impact beyond music
Bowie’s impact on fashion is attested to by the 400 costumes in the archive, including Japanese designer Kansai Yamamoto’s knitted jumpsuit for Bowie’s androgynous alien rock star persona, Ziggy Stardust, and the white suit Bowie wore on his 1983 Serious Moonlight tour.
“The Alexander McQueen costumes and some of the Ziggy costumes are proving particularly popular,” said V&A archivist Sabrina Offord.
About 200 items are displayed in cabinets in the archive’s main room, a selection made in consultation with local 18- to 25-year-olds as part of a project to provide opportunities for local young people
“Many didn’t know who he was or they had a lot of questions about why the V&A wanted to build an entire center dedicated to him,” Haddon said. “By the end, they were convinced.”
324-FLEA(3532) palyflea@gmail.com Saturday, September 20
BOWIE
REBUKE ––––––
will reevaluate his behavior to determine if he can serve on boards again. Romero and Councilman Ruben Abrica voted no.
Romero was given 10 minutes to give a statement where he apologized to Lincoln for calling him “deaf and dumb” and shook his hand. Barragan said council is meeting because of Romero’s own words and repeated actions, and to enforce respect and restore trust.
Romero said he found the punishment to be an overreach and reiterated his letter to the council.
A crowd of residents, some supporting Romero, others against, filled every seat during the council meeting, with around 35 wanting to speak, but were limited to speaking until 6:40 p.m.
Resident Julian Cierra asked council why Romero was being singled out after Dinan had also been disrespectful by pulling out his phone to take photos of the crowd during meetings and is always smirking.
By stripping Romero from his positions on the board, council is removing a voice of the community, Cierra said.
Former mayor speaks
Former Mayor Regina Wallace-Jones called out council for their disrespectful behavior and supported reprimanding Romero.
“Our residents deserve elected officials to treat one another with basic respect and integrity and dignity. They deserve a council that conducts itself with professionalism, even amidst disagreement,” Wallace said.
Councilman Ruben Abrica said there was unfairness between Dinan and Romero’s actions towards other council members because he experienced racist
comments from Dinan. Dinan called Abrica a “snarling dog” in a social media post to the community after a meeting in May, according to Abrica.
‘What kind of city have we become?’
“What kind of city have we become that we allow people to make racist comments and we don’t say anything?” Abrica said, asking when there will be a meeting to discuss Dinan’s misconduct.
Abrica said the meeting yesterday felt like a form of revenge against Romero, but he was in support of reprimanding him.
Abrica and Romero have regularly voted against the current council majority. Both men have been on the council for decades, while Barragan was elected in 2022 and Dinan and Lincoln in 2024.
It is a double standard to only hold Romero accountable when Dinan’s actions have not been addressed because Dinan didn’t say it during a council meeting, Abrica said, as residents would snap in agreement. Abrica, along with Romero, voted against the council majority to remove Romero from multiple boards the council had appointed him to.
Residents brought signs
Residents held signs saying “Carlos Romero must go” and “If Romero is reprimanded, Dinan should be too.”
Barragan said she had a hard time trusting council members to be respectful if they were not demonstrating that during council meetings.
Romero was reprimanded for violating the city’s code of ethics twice.
The first violation was on June 3, when Romero told Dinan that if his child “doesn’t want to go to perhaps, multiracial groups, that is another issue.”
Dinan said Romero’s comment “deeply insults him,” especially since his son is Hispanic and his best
friend is black. Due to the large number of residents who did not get to speak, some started shouting after the meeting, attempting to get Barragan’s attention for not giving them time to speak. Council usually meets on Tuesdays, but a special meeting was called for Romero’s rebuke. As a result, the council needed to end by 7 p.m. so the city’s Rent Stablization Board could meet in council chambers.
KIRK –––––––––
reckoning over ways to prevent political grievances from manifesting as deadly violence seemed elusive.
Videos posted to social media from Utah Valley University show Kirk speaking into a handheld microphone while sitting under a white tent emblazoned with the slogans “The American Comeback” and “Prove Me Wrong.” A single shot rings out and Kirk can be seen reaching up with his right hand as a large volume of blood gushes from the left side of his neck. Stunned spectators are heard gasping and screaming before people start to run away. The Associated Press was able to confirm the videos were taken at Sorensen Center courtyard on the Utah Valley University campus.
Asked about mass shooters
Kirk was speaking at a debate hosted by his nonprofit political organization, Turning Point USA. Immediately before the shooting, Kirk was taking questions from an audience member about mass shootings and gun violence.
“Do you know how many transgender Americans have been mass shooters over the last 10 years?” the person asked. Kirk responded, “Too many.”
The questioner followed up: “Do you know how many mass shooters there have been in America over the last 10 years?” “Counting or not counting gang
violence?” Kirk asked. Then a single shot rang out. The shooter, who Cox pledged would be held accountable in a state with the death penalty, wore dark clothing and fired from a roof on campus some distance away.
The death was announced on social media by Trump, who praised the 31-year-old Kirk, the co-founder and CEO of the youth organization Turning Point USA, as “Great, and even Legendary.” Later yesterday, he released a recorded video from the White House in which he called Kirk a “martyr for truth and freedom” and blamed the rhetoric of the “radical left” for the killing.
Utah Valley University said the campus was immediately evacuated and remained closed. Classes were canceled until further notice. Those still on campus were asked to stay in place until police officers could safely escort them off campus. Armed officers walked around the neighborhood bordering the campus, knocking on doors and asking for information on the shooter.
Officers were seen looking at a photo on their phones and showing it to people to see if they recognized a person of interest.
Was first stop on tour
The event, billed as the first stop on Kirk’s “The American Comeback Tour,” had generated a polarizing campus reaction. An online petition calling for university administrators to bar Kirk from appearing received nearly 1,000 signatures. The university issued a statement last week citing First Amendment rights and affirming its “commitment to free speech, intellectual inquiry, and constructive dialogue.”
Last week, Kirk posted on X images of news clips showing his visit was sparking controversy. He wrote, “What's going on in Utah?”
Dems condemned shooting
The shooting drew swift condemnation across the political aisle as Democratic officials joined Trump, who ordered flags lowered to half-staff and issued a presidential proclamation, and Republican allies of Kirk in decrying the violence.
“The attack on Charlie Kirk is disgusting, vile, and reprehensible,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who last March hosted Kirk on his podcast, posted on X.
“The murder of Charlie Kirk breaks my heart. My deepest sympathies are with his wife, two young children and friends,” said Gabrielle Giffords, the former Democratic congresswoman who was wounded in a 2011 shooting in her Arizona district.
Political violence spike
The shooting appeared poised to become part of a spike of political violence that has touched a range of ideologies and representatives of both major parties. The attacks include the assassination of a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband at their house in June, the firebombing of a Colorado parade to demand Hamas release hostages, and a fire set at the house of Pennsylvania’s governor, who is Jewish, in April. The most notorious of these events is the shooting of Trump during a campaign rally last year.
Former Utah congressman Jason Chaffetz, a Republican who was at yesterday’s event, said in an interview on
Fox News Channel that he heard one shot and saw Kirk go back.
“It seemed like it was a close shot,” Chaffetz said, who seemed shaken as he spoke.
He said there was a light police presence at the event and Kirk had some security but not enough.
“Utah is one of the safest places on the planet,” he said. “And so we just don’t have these types of things.”
Turning Point was founded in suburban Chicago in 2012 by Kirk, then 18, and William Montgomery, a tea party activist, to proselytize on college campuses for low taxes and limited government. It was not an immediate success.
Regular on cable TV
Soon, Kirk was a regular presence on cable TV, where he leaned into the culture wars and heaped praise on the then-president. Trump and his son were equally effusive and often spoke at Turning Point conferences.
Kirk announced he was organizing buses to travel to Washington to back Trump on Jan. 6, 2021, and later invoked the Fifth Amendment rather than answering questions from the Jan. 6 subcommittee.
Also in 2021, as he stepped up criticism of the Black Lives Matter movement on college campuses, Kirk called George Floyd, the Black man whose 2020 murder at the hands of Minneapolis police sparked protests that roiled Trump's last full year in office, a “scumbag.”
Toured colleges
Kirk was a regular presence on college campuses. Last year, for the social media program “Surrounded,” he faced off against 20 liberal college students to defend his viewpoints, including that abortion is murder and should be illegal.
The author of several books, including one on the Second Amendment, Kirk was a staunch supporter of gun rights.
“I think it’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights,” Kirk said during a Turning Point event in Salt Lake City in 2023, adding that gun deaths can be reduced but will never go away.
Relished debate
Admirers stressed that, for all of Kirk’s confrontational rhetoric, he relished debate and the free exchange of ideas. “His entire project was built on reaching across the divide and using speech, not violence, to address and resolve the issues!” William Wolfe, executive director of the Center for Baptist Leadership, posted on X.
Kirk’s style was influential for a new generation of conservatives. Republican Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida spoke on the Capitol steps after the shooting yesterday, reflecting on Kirk’s influence on her political journey.
“I was supposed to go to medical school. Charlie Kirk called me the day before I was supposed to leave, and recruited me to be the national Hispanic outreach director for the organization,” Luna said. “I was with him at many of them, debating those kids, and that conversation needs to happen. You can't squelch that.”
Kirk was married to podcaster Erika Frantzve. They have two young children.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS / INVITATION TO BID
Notice is hereby given that the governing board (“Board”) of the Mountain View Whisman School District (“District”) will receive sealed bids for the following project:
PARK RESTROOMS LANDSCAPE - PHASE 2 PROJECT (“Project” or “Contract”)
Sealed Bids will be received until 2:00 p.m., October 2, 2025, at the District Office, located at 1400 Montecito Avenue, Mountain View, California 94043, at or after which time the bids will be opened and publicly read aloud. Any claim by a bidder of error in its bid must be made in compliance with section 5100 et seq. of the Public Contract Code. Any bid that is submitted after this time shall be nonresponsive and returned to the bidder.
The Project consists of:
Landscaping for the Park Restrooms at three (3) sites; Imai Elementary School, Landels Elementary School & Castro/Mistral Elementary School.
All bids shall be on the form provided by the District. Each bid must conform and be responsive to all pertinent Contract Documents, including, but not limited to, the Instructions to Bidders.
To bid on this Project, the Bidder is required to possess one or more of the following State of California Contractor Licenses:
C27 – Landscaping Contractor
The Bidder’s license(s) must be active and in good standing at the time of the bid opening and must remain so throughout the term of the Contract.
As security for its Bid, each bidder shall provide with its Bid form
• a bid bond issued by an admitted surety insurer on the form provided by the District,
• cash, or
• a cashier’s check or a certified check, drawn to the order of the Mountain View Whisman School District, in the amount of ten percent (10%) of the total bid price. This bid security shall be a guarantee that the Bidder shall, within seven (7) calendar days after the date of the Notice of Award, enter into a contract with the District for the performance of the services as stipulated in the bid.
The successful Bidder shall be required to furnish a 100% Performance Bond and a 100% Payment Bond if it is awarded the contract for the Project.
The successful Bidder may substitute securities for any monies withheld by the District to ensure performance under the Contract, in accordance with the provisions of section 22300 of the Public Contract Code.
The successful Bidder and its subcontractors shall pay all workers on the Project not less than the general prevailing rate of per diem wages and the general prevailing rate for holiday and overtime work as determined by the Director of the Department of Industrial Relations, State of California, for the type of work performed and the locality in which the work is to be performed within the boundaries of the District, pursuant to sections 1770 et seq. of the California Labor Code. Prevailing wage rates are on file with the District and are available to any interested party on request or at www.dir.ca.gov/oprl/statistics_and_databases. html. Bidders and Bidders’ subcontractors shall comply with the registration and qualification requirements pursuant to sections 1725.5 and 1771.1 of the California Labor Code.
A mandatory pre-bid conference and site visit will be held on September 18, 2025, at 1:00 p.m. beginning at Landels ES, 115 West Dana Street, Mountain View, CA 94041. Additional site location TBD. All participants are required to sign in at the Administration Building. The Site Visit is expected to take approximately (1) hour.
Contract Documents are available on September 11, 2025, for review by contacting Brenda Parella-Greystone West brenda@greystonewest.com for an electronic set of plans and a list of the builders’ exchanges.
The District’s Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids and/or waive any irregularity in any bid received. If the District awards the Contract, the security of unsuccessful bidder(s) shall be returned within sixty (60) days from the time the award is made. Unless otherwise required by law, no bidder may withdraw its bid for ninety (90) days after the date of the bid opening.
The District shall award the Contract, if it awards it at all, to the lowest responsive responsible bidder based on: The base bid amount only.
Mountain View Whisman School District
By: Rebecca Westover, Ed. D, Chief Business Officer
Publication Dates: (1) September 11, 2025 (2) September 18, 2025