General_Excellence_030310

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Andersons review ‘super sedans.’

St. Francis wins in CCS quarterfinals. Sports, Page 21

On the Road, Page 41

www.losaltosonline.com Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Community news for Los Altos, Los Altos Hills and Mountain View since 1947

Tightening the knob Efforts under way to curb Los Altos Hills’ excessive water consumption

Vol. 64 No. 9 • 50 cents

Change in trash service spurs debate By Jana Seshadri Town Crier Staff Writer

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The Bay Area Water Supply and Conservation Agency (BAWSCA) released its annual report in January stating that Los Altos Hills residents used 334 gallons of water per person, per day in 2009. Not only is that tops among the 27 Bay Area cities surveyed,

fter 58 years of hauling, discarding and recycling Los Altos’ trash, Recology Los Altos, formerly known as Los Altos Garbage Company, has been sidelined in favor of a new waste disposal provider. And some residents are not happy about it. The Los Altos City Council voted unanimously Feb. 23 to support a staff recommendation to award the city’s waste management contract to the Santa Clara-based Mission Trail Waste Systems, which has been in business for 80 years and currently serves 250,000 residential customers. Pending official approval of the contract, Mission Trail will begin service in September, when the city’s 10-year contract with Recology expires. “We set out to get the best deal we could,” Councilman Lou Becker said. “We set the

See WATER, Page 6

See GARBAGE, Page 4

PHOTOS BY ELLIOTT BURR/TOWN CRIER

The Los Altos Hills City Council formed the water conservation committee, above, last year to advise the council on ways to implement ordinances that help reduce water consumption in town. From left, Jean Struthers, Bill Krause, Chairman John Harpootlian, Peter Evans, Kathleen Santora, Kit Gordon, Lysbeth Goodman and Brian Holtz discuss water conservation at their Feb. 24 meeting.

By Elliott Burr Town Crier Staff Writer

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os Altos Hills residents are accustomed to seeing their town near the top of impressive nationwide rankings: eighth-priciest zip code, fourth-high-

est median home price for a city of less than 10,000 people and third-highest median income. But for the second year in a row, Los Altos Hills sits atop a less-glamorous list: A survey ranks it as the Bay Area’s most watergluttonous city.

In surprise move, LA council postpones visioning process By Jana Seshadri Town Crier Staff Writer

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n a move some saw as a setback to the downtown revitalization process, the Los Altos City Council Feb. 23 voted 3-2 to postpone a downtown visioning process until the 2010-2011 budget cycle, which begins July 1. The city had engaged Anderson Brulé Architects to conduct workshops beginning this month soliciting residents’ input on the elements they would like to see in

a renovated downtown. Mayor David Casas, Councilman Ron Packard and Councilwoman Val Carpenter voted to delay the process. Councilwoman Megan Satterlee and Councilman Lou Becker cast dissenting votes after urging fellow councilmembers to reconsider. “It will be a mistake to postpone this,” Satterlee said. “We have a lot of momentum going on now. We authorized this before and should go forward with it.” Several local residents ex-

pressed dismay at the council’s unexpected decision. “I’m visibly shocked by the decision you just made,” said Bill Maston, architect and member of the Downtown Development Committee. The postponement might lead residents to think councilmembers do not trust them to participate in the process effectively, several speakers said. “I hope you’ll move forward expeditiously with the visioning process so people will feel

that they’re engaged in a transparent process, u n d e r st a n d what’s going on and that their thoughts are Casas w e l c o m e ,” said Kim Cranston, downtown property owner. While the city council voted 4-1 to approve the visioning workshops in November, the request for an

additional $17,750 to increase the consultant’s fee to $72,750 caused some councilmembers to question whether the price was too high. “I completely understand the premise and value the staff’s opinion. But my concern is purely financial,” said Casas, the sole nay vote last November for the visioning process. “We should think about how we can accomplish this at a fraction of the cost with a higher return on investment.” See POSTPONED, Page 7


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