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JANUARY 21, 2015 | VOL. 50 NO. 20 WWW.THEALMANACONLINE.COM THE HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER FOR MENLO PARK, ATHERTON, PORTOLA VALLEY AND WOODSIDE Big band swings into town for Herb Wong tribute | Page 12 Fire district’s growing pains Rendering shows a new two-story firehouse planned for downtown Menlo Park Section 2
Transcript
Page 1: JANUARY 21, 2015| VOL. 50 NO. 20 … · 4 Q TheAlmanac Q TheAlmanacOnline.com Q January 21, 2015 Ken DeLeon CalBRE #01342140 Michael Repka CalBRE #01854880 KDL Mi h l R k ® 650.488.7325

J A N U A R Y 2 1 , 2 0 1 5 | VOL . 50 NO. 20 WWW.THEALMANACONLINE .COM

T H E H O M E T O W N N E W S P A P E R F O R M E N L O P A R K , A T H E R T O N , P O R T O L A V A L L E Y A N D W O O D S I D E

Big band swings into town for Herb Wong tribute | Page 12

Fire district’sgrowing painsRendering shows a new two-story firehouse planned for downtown Menlo Park Section 2

Page 2: JANUARY 21, 2015| VOL. 50 NO. 20 … · 4 Q TheAlmanac Q TheAlmanacOnline.com Q January 21, 2015 Ken DeLeon CalBRE #01342140 Michael Repka CalBRE #01854880 KDL Mi h l R k ® 650.488.7325

2 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 3

UPFRONT

Two concerts featuring music inspired by and dedicated to Mar-tin Luther King Jr. and performed by a bevy of accomplished Bay Area and New York musicians are scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 24 and 25, at Eastside College Preparatory School in East Palo Alto. The annual event, which is in its sixth year, is a benefit for the school, located at 1041 Myrtle St. The program is titled “Walk Together — a Musical Tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. and the 50th Anniversary of the Voting Rights Act.” The program includes spiritu-als, freedom songs and instru-mental music in traditional and jazz styles. Performers in the line-up are pianist Josephine Gandolfi and soprano Yolanda Rhodes of Menlo Park; pianists/vocalists LaDoris Cordell and Deanne Tucker; pianist Val-

erie Capers; violinist Susan C. Brown; cellist Victoria Ehrlich; John Robinson, bass and cello; clarinetist Carol Somersille; John Worley, trumpet; John Monroe, trombone; Rufus Oliv-ier III, bassoon; and Jim Kassis, percussion. The Eastside Preparatory School Choir will also per-form, with Jansen Verplank on keyboard and David Chaidez directing. The program includes several original compositions. Valerie Capers’ multi-movement work, “In Praise of Freedom,” is based on Dr. King’s March on Wash-ington speech. Her arrange-ment of “Hold On: Keep your Eyes on the Prize” is a new version of a spiritual frequently sung by freedom singers of the 1960s. Also, new chamber works by John Robinson and Joshua McGhee will be premiered.

Also on the program are works by William Grant Still, Dizzy Gillespie, Dolores White, Zenobia Powell Perry, Lena McLin, Fats Waller and Donny Hathaway. The series of annual concerts became a springboard for a related project, which came into being in 2013 when concert organizers Josephine Gandolfi, LaDoris Cordell and Deanne Tucker formed the African American Composer Initiative. It’s an enterprise dedicated to the performance and prolifera-tion of music by African Ameri-can composers. More informa-tion is at aacinitiative.org. Concert tickets are $20 gen-eral and $5 for students and seniors. They can be purchased online through Brown Paper Tickets at tinyurl.com/AACIni-tiative15. For information, call 688-0850.

Photo by Eric Lutkin

Musicians and guest artists of the African American Composer Initiative, gather onstage at the Eastside College Preparatory School Performing Arts Center after the January 2014 benefit concert.

30+ years of local knowledge.

Born in Menlo Park.

Raised in Atherton.

A Woodside resident.

Because of all your knowledgeable and honest advice, your meticulous and thorough attention to detail, my home sold quickly and for more than I ever dreamed possible. Growing up here and being respected in our community, only adds to your genuine apprecia-tion and understanding of this unique housing market.

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Multimedia Advertising Sales Representative

Embarcadero Media is a locally-owned and independent multimedia company based in Palo Alto. We have published in Palo Alto for the last 35 years, with award winning publications such as the Palo Alto Weekly, Mountain View Voice and Menlo Park Almanac on the Peninsula, and the Pleasanton Weekly in the East Bay. In each of these communities our papers are the dominate, best-read and most respected among its various competitors. We also operate extremely popular interactive community news and information websites in all of our cities, plus unique online-only operations in Danville and San Ramon.

We’re looking for talented and articulate Outside Sales Representatives for our Retail Sales Team. Experience in online, social and print media sales is a plus, but not a requirement. Familiarity with the advertising industry and selling solutions to small and medium size businesses is a big plus. Four year college degree is preferred.

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450 Cambridge Avenue | Palo Alto, CA 94306 | 650.326.8210PaloAltoOnline.com | TheAlmanacOnline.com | MountainViewOnline.com

Tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.

Newsroom: 223-6525

Newsroom fax: 223-7525

Advertising: 854-2626

Advertising fax: 223-7570

Classified ads: 854-0858

E-mail news, information, obituaries and photos (with captions) to: [email protected]

E-mail letters to the editor to: [email protected]

THE ALMANAC (ISSN 1097-3095 and USPS 459370) is published every Wednesday by Embarcadero Media, 3525 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA 94025-6558. Periodicals Postage Paid at Menlo Park, CA and at additional mailing offices. Adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation for San Mateo County, The Almanac is delivered free to homes in Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley and Woodside. Subscriptions for $60 per year or $100 per 2 years are welcome. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Almanac, 3525 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA 94025-6558. Copyright ©2014 by Embarcadero Media, All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited.

To request free delivery, or stop delivery, of The Almanac in zip code 94025, 94027, 94028 and the Woodside portion of 94062, call 854-2626.

C A L L I N G O N T H E A L M A N A C

The Rotary Club of Menlo Park is offering grants up to $20,000 to local nonprofit groups that identify a compelling public need in Menlo Park or a nearby com-munity and propose a project to help solve that problem.

The grants, which will help pay for the projects, will range from $1000 to $10,000, and will be

awarded by March 31, according to Michelle Tsui, who is running the grant program for the club. The deadline to apply for a grant is Jan. 31. In recent years, the club has made grants to approximately 15 nonprofit groups, including Court Appointed Special Advo-cates for Children of San Mateo

County (CASA), St. Anthony’s Padua Dining Room, and the Ravenswood Education Founda-tion. Go to MenloParkRotary.org and check under the Menlo Park Rotary Foundation tab for grant application guidelines. Or email [email protected].

Rotary Club offers $20,000 to nonprofit groups

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4 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

Ken DeLeonCalBRE #01342140

Michael RepkaCalBRE #01854880Mi h l R kK D L

®

6 5 0 . 4 8 8 . 7 3 2 5 | i n f o @ d e l e o n r e a l t y . c o m | w w w. d e l e o n r e a l t y . c o m | C a l B R E # 0 1 9 0 3 2 2 4

The Crown Jewel of Palo AltoCombining historic charm with modern luxury, this North Palo Alto estate sits on a rare parcel of nearly one-half acre (per City of Palo Alto). This stunning 7-bedroom, 3.5-bath Victorian, with over 3,300 sq. ft. of living space (per plans), offers a wraparound porch, heritage oaks, rolling lawns, and a broad terrace with koi pond. Ceilings of over 10 feet and large picture windows flood the home with natural light. The remodeled chef ’s kitchen boasts a Wolf range, Sub-Zero refrigerator, and quartz countertops. Five bedrooms are on the upper level, plus one bedroom on the main level and a separate one-bedroom apartment on the lower level. Additional amenities include a 628 sq. ft. finished attic (per plans) (not included in living space footage), a large basement with space for a wine cellar, spacious driveway, and three-car garage. Blocks away, the restaurants and boutiques of California Avenue beckon. Approved plans for finishing the walk-out lower level are available. Award winning Palo Alto schools include Escondido Elementary, Jordan Middle School, and Palo Alto High (buyer to verify enrollment).

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 5

M E N L O P A R K | A T H E R T O N | W O O D S I D E | P O R T O L A V A L L E Y

By Barbara WoodAlmanac Staff Writer

While it is still early in the process, the discussion at a recent

board meeting of the Sequoia Union High School District offered a glimpse of what some are envisioning for a new small high school in Menlo Park: a school with a technology focus that partners with business and the community college district, and has architecture as distinc-tive as its mission.

The district is finalizing the purchase of a 2.1-acre property at 150 Jefferson Drive in Menlo Park, “an area that’s rapidly shifting from light industry to high tech,” according to Sequoia Union superintendent Jim Lianides.

The district wants to build a small high school that would have 300 to 400 students and

could open as early as fall 2017. The district has also purchased property at 535 Old County Road in San Carlos for another small high school, but district officials say the Menlo Park school will be built first. Matthew Zito, the princi-pal at Menlo-Atherton High School who is transitioning into a new job overseeing the district’s building program as chief facilities officer, spoke enthusiastically at the Jan. 14 meeting about what the Menlo Park school could be. “We have a great opportu-nity” to do things that the dis-trict can’t do at bigger school sites, Mr. Zito said. “You want it to be a school that’s drawing from a whole population of young people.” The school will be preparing students for college, he said. It will not be a vocational school, but will partner with near-

by businesses, which include Intuit, Oracle and Facebook, as well as with the San Mateo County Community College District. The design of the school building will also be impor-tant, Mr. Zito said. “I think the facility, if we do that right, will ... sell the school,” he said. “I’ve told Aaron (Jobson, the architect working with the district) you’d better design us a cool ... building,” he said. “Make sure that the form fol-lows the function of the cur-

riculum.” Mr. Zito said the district also needs to realize that a small school is not just a scaled-down version of a large school, and the district should be “making sure we’re leveraging the opportunities of that small school.” Several school board mem-bers mentioned “linked learn-ing” as a possibility for the new school. According to the Linked Learning Alli-ance, formed in 2008, linked learning combines academic and vocational learning in one school, with the goal of readying students for higher education while they learn as much as possible about career choices through internships and other partnerships with business. “I think one of the chal-lenges is, the possibilities are infinite,” board member Chris

Thomsen said. The district board adopted Mr. Lianides’ recommenda-tions for a task force that will pin down the themes that will guide the design of the two new schools. Mr. Lianides said he hopes the task force will be back with its recommenda-tions by spring. Technology and health sci-ences are the two top themes that came out of recent district surveys of parents, staff and students. But Mr. Lianides said the district also needs to survey parents of the younger students who will actually be attending the high schools. “Another key area,” he said, “is working with surround-ing businesses and so on and see what is supported. Where are strong potential partner-ships?”

Exciting opportunity seen at new high school

Local News

The new Menlo Park school could partner with local tech giants and the community

college district.

See OPPORTUNITY, page 8

By Barbara WoodAlmanac Staff Writer

Woodside’s state-man-dated plan for provid-ing more housing in

the town is being updated, and while the plan doesn’t offer many policy changes, it reveals some interesting information about the town. Woodside’s Town Coun-cil unanimously approved an updated draft of the housing element of its general plan, the document that guides develop-ment regulations, when it met on Jan. 13. The state requires that the general plan’s housing element be updated every eight years, and mandates what must be included in it.

The background on the town included in the update shows, for example, that 94 percent of Woodside’s homes are owner-occupied, leaving only 6 percent of the town’s residents as renters. In January 2013 the town had 5,441 residents, with 1,128 — or nearly 20 percent — over the age of 65. The median age of Wood-side residents is 48, well over the San Mateo County median age of 39.

The median household income

in Woodside — $238,595 in 2011 — is also considerably higher than in the rest of San Mateo County, where it is $92,000. Even so, 19 percent of Wood-side’s residents are considered low income, which is defined by the county as below $63,350 a year for a one-person household and below $72,400 for a two-person household. The town has 2,180 homes, which is 7 percent more than it had in 2000, with a median sales price of close to $2 million in October 2014, the report says. Most of those homes have been around for a while — nearly 80 percent of Woodside’s total housing stock was built before 1980, with nearly 50 percent built

Housing plan reveals snapshot of Woodside

HOUSING PLAN, page 8

19% of Woodside’s residents are

considered low income, defined by the county as below $63,350 a

year for a one-person household.

By Sandy BrundageAlmanac Staff Writer

The arraignment of the owner of Menalto Cleaners on 40 felony

counts of credit card fraud has been delayed until Thursday, Jan. 22, at the request of his attorney. On the tail of being evicted

from the premises of his popu-lar Menlo Park dry-cleaning business, Menalto Cleaners, owner Edwin Gary Smith was arrested on Wednesday, Jan. 14, for allegedly bilking at least 38 customers out of more than $678,000 from December 2011 to October 2014, according to police. The investigation into Mr.

Smith, a 63-year-old Menlo Park resident dubbed the “Mayor of Menalto” for his bonhomie, started in October after two clients who had left their credit card numbers on file at the business for monthly billing complained to police about unauthorized charges.

Menalto Cleaners owner arrested E. Gary Smith faces credit card fraud charges

Photo by Michelle Le/The Almanac

E. Gary Smith, right, in his dry-cleaning business, Menalto Cleaners, in July 2013.

See CLEANERS, page 8

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6 The Almanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

The Stanford Women’s Cancer Center invites you

to its quarterly series featuring talks on women’s

cancers. This talk will focus on clinical trials and

why they are important for patients. Join us

to learn more about clinical trials available at

Stanford for gynecologic cancers.

PLEASE JOIN

Oliver Dorigo, MD, PhD Division Chief of Gynecologic Oncology Stanford Women’s Cancer Center

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2015

6:30PM – 8:00PM

Stanford Health Library, Hoover Pavilion

211 Quarry Road, Suite 201 • Palo Alto, CA 94304

To RSVP, call 650.736.6555 or online

at stanfordhealthcare.org/events.

This event is free and open to the public.

Please register, seating is limited.

WOMEN & CANCER QUARTERLY TALK SERIES

Clinical Trials

N E W S

By Sandy BrundageAlmanac Staff Writer

For the second time in two weeks, a suspect wanted for homicide in Merced

County has been arrested in Menlo Park, according to a Menlo Park Police Department report. Around 2 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 15, detectives from the Narcotic Enforcement Team spotted a silver BMW linked to the Merced case parked in the driveway of a home in the 100 block of Newbridge Street in Menlo Park, according to the report. They set up surveillance around the residence, which paid off when a man matching the description of one suspect left in a dark-colored Honda approximately two and a half hours later. The resulting traffic stop led to the arrest of 24-year-old Victor Hernandez of Menlo Park. He has been transported to the Merced County jail, the report said.

Officers from multiple jurisdic-tions joined a search for another homicide suspect, but came up empty-handed. Jose Hernandez, 26, of Menlo Park, is believed to still be the area, police said. Police ask that anyone with information about this case call 330-6300 or the anonymous tip line at 330-6395. A

Homicide suspect arrested, another remains at large

By Barbara WoodAlmanac Staff Writer

Taxpayers could save more than $6 million if interest rates remain low until

the Sequoia Union High School District can carry through with a bond refinancing approved by the district’s board when it met on Jan. 14. Consultant Tony Hsieh of Keygent Advisors said refinanc-ing two series of bonds sold by the district in 2005 and 2008 could save the district as much as $6.2 million in interest, even after paying all the costs of the refinancing. While $6.2 million is a large amount of money, the savings to individual taxpayers are rela-tively modest. Mr. Hsieh said the savings will be 54 cents a year per $100,000 of assessed value,

or $5.40 for a property appraised at $1 million. School board member Chris Thomsen asked if the district could keep the $6.2 million and use it for needed projects. “The savings to individual homeowners is pretty small,” he said. While Mr. Hsieh said it could be possible for the dis-trict to retain the money saved by refinancing, the idea did not have much support from other board members. “It feels to me like it would be a bait and switch on behalf of our students,” said board member Alan Sarver. The district has refinanced bonds on seven previous occa-sions, Mr. Hsieh’s report said, saving taxpayers approximately $25.5 million. A

Refinance could save taxpayers $6 million

Homicide suspect Jose Hernandez, 26, is still at large. Menlo Park police said they think he remains in the area.

Creekside Learning Lab in Portola Valley will hold an open house Saturday, Jan. 24, from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the school, 884 B-1 Portola Road in Portola Valley. Creekside, a private one-class school, says in 2015-16 it will enroll up to 16 students for a blended fourth- and fifth-grade with a mix of genders, ages, abilities and skills, the school says.

At the open house, visitors can meet staff, students and parents, and learn about the school’s philosophy, curriculum and admissions process. A presenta-tion starts at 2 p.m. The school’s students study a series of five open-ended proj-ects, taking several weeks each, using guided self-study. Reserve a spot by emailing [email protected].

Learning Lab holds open house

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 7

TOWN OF WOODSIDE2955 WOODSIDE ROADWOODSIDE, CA 94062

INVITES APPLICATIONS FOR ARCHITECTURAL

AND SITE REVIEW BOARD

The Architectural and Site Review Board reviews and makes recommendations to the Planning Director regard-ing community character, site planning, building design and landscape elements on residential and commercial applications.

Interested residents may request information and appli-cations Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m.-12 noon and

2955 Woodside Road, or telephone (650) 851-6790, or through the Town’s web site at www.woodsidetown.org, Residents, Volunteer Opportunities. Deadline for applica-tions is Tuesday, February 3, 2015, 5:00 p.m.

Please join us Woodside Preschool Open House and Tour, Friday, January 30th from 8:30-10:00 a.m.

(ADULTS ONLY).

Open Houseand Tour

Woodside Preschool

Woodside Elementary School District will be accepting applications for the Fall 2015 Preschool

Classes beginning February 1st, 2015.

Woodside Preschool is a half-day, fee-based pro-gram running from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. (with optional extended care). Children must be at least 2 years, 7 months old in order to attend Woodside Preschool. Enrollment choices include two days,

three days, or five days per week.

Interested families are encouraged to attend our Open House and fill out an application. Applica-tions will be available online beginning February

1st. For more information, visit our website at www.woodside.k12.ca.us or contact Lisa at

[email protected], (650) 851-1571 ext. 250.

N E W S

Good for Business. Good for the Community.

Good for You.

By Sandy BrundageAlmanac Staff Writer

Most people make their resolutions around Jan. 1. For cities, the

process is a bit more involved, and Menlo Park is no excep-tion. The council is expected to decide sometime this spring what capital improvement projects and goals to prioritize for the next five years, months before the new fiscal year starts in July. The Planning Commission signed off on its suggested capital improvement priorities on Jan. 12, and one recom-mendation is to move a study of the feasibility of building a parking garage downtown from the “unfunded” to the “funded” column. According to the draft capi-tal improvement plan, a study of the cost, site, circulation, feasibility and construction of building one or more parking garages on parking plazas 1, 2, or 3 would cost approximately $200,000. Such a structure has resur-faced as a priority for the city many times: “Four-level parking garage downtown?” (Almanac headline from 2005); “Parking garages near top of city priority list” (2004); “Menlo Park takes new look at parking garages” (2003); and innumerable discussions dur-ing the five-year specific plan process. One sticking point has

always been who would pay for it, with the Menlo Park Presbyterian Church stating its willingness over the years to chip in. But the Planning Commis-sion’s recommendation finally moves the concept one step closer to reality, should the

council agree that now is the time to fund the study. During the Jan. 12 meet-ing, commissioners worried that without visible, audible advocacy, the council may not understand the reasons for prioritizing the study. “Why do we think that’s so pressing, to get on top of that now?” Commissioner John Kadvany said. In a nutshell: With mixed-use complexes of housing, office space and retail on the way from Stan-ford as well as Greenheart Land Co., it’s better to have the study done and payment structure in place before more downtown parking is needed. At least one council member is ready to move ahead. Mayor

Cat Carlton told the Almanac recently that she’s excited to start talking about possi-bly building an underground garage topped by a park at surface level, an idea that some residents, such as those par-ticipating in grassroots groups “Re-Imagine Menlo Park” and “Imagine Menlo Park,” are also eager to explore. As for other priorities, the Planning Commission recommended moving the compilation of single-family residential design guidelines into the “funded” column as well, and expediting imple-mentation of the downtown/El Camino Real specific plan, with an emphasis on making it easier for pedestrians and bicyclists to get from one side of the street to the other, and from one part of the city to another. The commission stressed that its take on the design guidelines is advisory rather than dictatorial. “People out-side of this dais have this idea it’s going to be this very rigid imposition,” Mr. Kadvany said, when instead it’s meant to be “very soft advice” to help developers and home-owners avoid getting blind-sided during the approval process. The council will hold its annual goal-setting meeting on Monday, Jan. 26, and is expected to consider the capi-tal improvement project pri-orities by March. A

Menlo Park prepares to take on downtown parking garage issue

With mixed-use complexes on the way, it’s better to

have the study done before more parking is needed, according to

the commission.

The officer in charge of code enforcement will be on hand to answer questions and share ideas during a community forum on Thursday, Jan. 22, at the Belle Haven police substation at 871 Hamilton Ave.

Topics include overnight park-ing, garbage and graffiti. Police Chief Bob Jonsen will also give a neighborhood update.

The meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments and translators will be available.

Revenue jumpsMenlo Park saw an increase in

revenue garnered from the trans-fer of real estate during the first six months of this fiscal year, as compared to the same time period for 2013-14.

Through December 2014, 267 transactions were processed, generating more than $366,000, according to the city. Last year, the numbers were 235 transactions and $237,000. That’s an increase of $129,000. Economic Development Jim Cogan ascribed the increase to continued strong sales in the com-mercial and residential real estate sectors.

Flood safety Options for flood protection and reducing insurance costs will be discussed during a program on, “SAFER Bay: Sea Level Rise and Flood Control on San Fran-

cisquito Creek,” on Wednesday, Jan. 28. Len Materman, executive direc-tor of the San Francisquito Creek Joint Powers Authority, will be on hand. The free event starts at 7 p.m. at the Arrillaga Family Recreation Center at 700 Alma St. in Menlo Park.

Jan. 22: Code enforcement forum MENLO BRIEFS

Like us on

www.facebook.com/ AlmanacNews

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8 The Almanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

N E W S

A meeting with the county community college board is scheduled for late February, he said. “They’re very interested to partner with the Menlo Park school.”

Other of Mr. Lianides’ rec-ommendations for the task force include visits to “suc-cessful themed small schools,” and evaluation of the college and career options that will go along with the themes. The task force will also seek more

input from staff, he said. Money for the new schools, and for construction on the district’s existing campuses, comes from a $265 million bond measure approved by voters last June. Based on burgeoning enroll-ments in local elementary schools, the Sequoia district is expecting enrollment growth of at least 22 percent by the 2020-21 school year. Much of the growth is coming from school districts in Menlo Park, Atherton, Belmont and San Carlos. A

By Barbara WoodAlmanac Staff Writer

Many residents of Wood-side don’t even realize that Canada College is

within the town limits, perhaps because most have to get on the freeway to get to the college’s front entrance. So it may not be surprising that on Jan. 13, when the Town Council deliberated allowing the town’s first multi-family zoning, located entirely on the college campus, only one person turned up to speak.

The council voted to allow multi-family housing to be built on most of the campus, exclud-ing an open meadow on the west side of the campus that is close to some Woodside homes.

Two council members, Peter Mason and Anne Kasten, voted against the measure, but both said they would have preferred allowing the entire campus to be open to multi-family housing, not just part of it.

“We shouldn’t be excluding one of the few buildable parcels,” on the campus, Mr. Mason said, with Ms. Kasten adding her agreement.

The one speaker, Russel Baze, was representing one of the only Woodside neighborhoods with direct access to the campus. Canada College is located east of Interstate 280 off Farm Hill Boulevard, and the only way to get directly to the campus from other parts of Woodside is through a back entrance off Canada Road, which passes near a small group of Woodside homes.

Mr. Baze and his neighbors had earlier asked the town the exclude the large undeveloped meadow behind their homes from the new zoning for the campus, and the approved mea-sure did not include that area. Woodside approved the multi-family zoning as part of its state-required housing plan, in which local communities are required to plan how they would be able to provide a share of the region’s housing needs. Woodside had promised in its last revision of its housing plan to rezone the Canada campus. The zoning is based on devel-opment regulations that Red-wood City used when Canada built multi-family housing on the campus starting in 2008. In that case, because Woodside had not yet changed its zoning to allow the housing, the land the housing was built on had to be de-annexed from Woodside and annexed into Redwood City, which then allowed the development. The regulations for the new zoning include the requirement that that Canada College must own any housing built on the campus; and that buildings can not be taller than 35 feet. Up to 18 units per acre can be built, the same density as the current Canada Vista housing. The state requires that com-munities have plans that would allow the additional housing, but not that it actually be built. Barbara Christensen, a Canada College spokeswoman, said at the meeting that the college has no current plans to build any more housing. A

Woodside OKs town’s first multi-family zoning

According to the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office, several customers had confronted Mr. Smith about billing errors and while he said he would pay them back, allegedly failed to do so. The San Mateo County Sheriff ’s Office confirmed that Mr. Smith had been evicted from the building, located at 1921 Menalto Ave., on Tuesday, Jan. 13. Sources

told the Almanac that new owners would be taking over the business. The allegations include felony identity theft, credit card fraud and elder fiduciary abuse — one customer was 79 years old, according to court records. The current case involves 19 alleged victims who lost more than $350,000 combined. One client lost $70,000 without noticing for 18 months, the DA’s office said. Other frauds reportedly occurred outside the three-

year statute of limitations on credit card fraud. Police said Mr. Smith was taken into custody at his home without incident about 1:50 p.m., and he was booked into county jail. Bail was set at $500,000, but a judge reduced it to $350,000 at the request of the defense. Mr. Smith’s attorney, Michael Armstrong, declined to comment on the case. Cmdr. Dave Bertini said no other arrests are pending at this time. A

Photo by Michelle Le/The Almanac

Sheriff’s deputies talk to the landlord at 1921 Menalto Ave. in Menlo Park as they carry out the eviction of E. Gary Smith’s dry-cleaning business, Menalto Cleaners, on Jan. 13.

OPPORTUNITYcontinued from page 5

CLEANERScontinued from page 5

before 1960, the update says. Over the eight years cov-ered by the new housing plan, Woodside has been assigned by the Bay Area Association of Governments (ABAG) to show how 62 units of new housing could be built in the town. Of the total units that are consid-ered Woodside’s “fair share” of the region’s housing need, 36 units are to be for low-income residents. The updated housing plan says new housing for low-income residents could be provided by new accessory living units, also known as in-law units, guest houses or granny units. The town also is supposed to plan for 26 additional new homes for

those of moderate income or higher ($86,500 per year for a single-person household). The number of new units Woodside is asked to plan for is lower than that of some other local communities because it has no ready access to mass transit, Planning Director Jackie Young said. While the state requires com-munities only to plan for, not to actually construct, the new housing, Woodside has done better than some of its neighbors in providing additional housing. The update says that during the period covered by the last housing plan, 2007 to 2014, the town was assigned to provide for the building of 17 low-income units, but 24 were actually built, all of them accessory living quarters. Also, a total of 59 new

living units were built in the same period, with 31 of them single-family homes. It had been assigned a total of 41 new units for that period. Planning Director Young said that many accessory living units in Woodside are built to be occupied by people who work on a property. Others, she said, are planned to provide rental income or are built as a place for older residents to live while allowing their adult children and their families to move into the main house. One part of the draft updated housing element that council members asked to have modi-fied concerns undeveloped lots in the town. The update says Woodside has 270 vacant parcels totaling 894 acres. Council member Dave Burrow said many of those parcels could never be developed. “We should be much more pessimistic,” he said. “There are several sections where we talk about constraints, but we’re not very clear that the main constraint is that we don’t have the sewer capacity and we can’t get it,” he said. A

Support

HOUSING PLANcontinued from page 5

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 9

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The Voice is part of Embarcadero Media, which includes the Palo Alto Weekly and The Almanac. To apply, send a resume, cover letter and three news clips to Andrea Gemmet, Editor, at [email protected].

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This is an entry-level position, but an ideal candidate would have helpdesk and troubleshooting experience. We want that special someone who is technically savvy with excellent people skills. Windows server administration would be a huge plus.

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N E W S

Photo by Michelle Le/The Almanac

Workers pour concrete into a large bin during construction Jan. 16 of a covered grandstand designed to seat up to 200 people at the Little League baseball field at Holbrook-Palmer Park in Atherton.

By Barbara Wood

Almanac Staff Writer

As workers poured con-crete for a covered grandstand designed to

seat up to 200 people at Ather-ton’s Holbrook-Palmer Park, about six people carrying pro-test signs picketed Jan. 13 at the entrance to the park, with several returning Friday, Jan. 16.

Wally Sleeth, who organized the protest, said trucks had entered the park despite the picketers. “We’re not lying down in front of them,” he said.

One sign read: “Atherton is going concrete - is that what you want? Call Mayor DeGo-lia.” The group, which attract-ed some passersby who joined in, handed out f liers outlining their views.

In addition to the covered grandstand, the new field, which will be called Homer Field at Willie Mays Ballpark, will have covered dugouts, a permanent scoreboard, bath-rooms, storage and improve-ments to the field.

By Friday Mayor DeGolia said he had received two phone calls and three or four emails about the concrete work, and added that even if he had received dozens of calls, there is “nothing I can do.”

The efforts to stop the con-struction on the field have come too late, he said. “I have repeatedly informed Mr. Sleeth that if he didn’t want the Little League facility in the park,

then he should have timed his efforts before 75 percent of the town voted to upgrade the field, add electricity and water to that part of the park, and build a permanent seating area,” Mr. DeGolia said. But Mr. Sleeth on Friday said that even though the concrete

is now in place, “I’m not ready to give up. Not that I have any more cards to play.” One of the protesters, Sandy Crittenden, who serves on the board of the Holbrook-Palmer Park Foundation and also on the town’s Park and Recreation Committee, said he supports youth sports in the park, and loves “baseball in all forms.” “I don’t feel this stadium is the right structure for our only town park,” he said. “It is not in keeping with the natural and rural setting.” Mr. Crittenden said this was the first time either he or Mr. Sleeth have ever picketed any-thing.

Mr. Sleeth said there are oth-er nearby sites for Little League games. The plans for the Little League field in Holbrook-Palmer Park have “been upset-ting because the residents, the Parks and Rec (committee) and the Planning Commission said no to this.” A project to make major improvements to the field was one of the measures on the Atherton ballot in 2012, along with the issue of putting a new library in the park. The Little League project was approved by 75 percent of the voters, but after the vote, debate arose over just they had said yes to. The Planning Commission asked to have several aspects of the project changed, especially the size of the grandstand, but a divided City Council in Janu-ary 2014 approved the project with only minor modifica-tions. Construction on the Little League field began in Novem-ber, and league representatives said they hope to be able to use it by mid-February. The Little League is paying for the con-struction and other improve-ments to the park. As part of the contract with the town, the Little League has agreed to donate $27,500 to be used on repairs and improve-ments of the town’s tennis courts, which are close to the field. The Little League has also agreed to make improve-ments to the park they esti-mate will be worth $100,000. A

Pickets oppose Little League facilities

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Their target is construction of new baseball facilities in the park, including

permanent seating for 200 people.

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10 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

The Almanac

2014

HolidayFund

27 Anonymous ................ $64,925George & Marjorie Mader ...... 200Robert Lee Mullen .................. 500Linda Craig & Evan Hughes ........ *Carol Kemper ......................... 100Kritzik-McAuley Family ........... 150Marilyn Voelke ........................... *Maryann Chwalek .................. 100C Friesman ................................. *Helen Chen ............................ 100Gale & Bobbie Fullerton ......... 100Gerald Griffin ........................... 50Thomas Maufer ...................... 100Bob Barrett & Linda Atkinson . 200Colleen & Geoffrey Tate ............. *James Sinko ........................... 300Ramin Samadani .................... 100Dianne Ellsworth .................... 250Leonard Shar & Laura Hofstader ........................500Robin Gate ............................. 250Paul Perret .............................. 250E. R. Dodd .............................. 100Maggie Mah & Thomas Johnson ..*Bud Wendell ........................... 150Janice Jedkins ........................ 400Kenneth Ashford ...................... 75Barbara & Bill Binder ................. *Mayling Dixon ............................ *Nanci Yuan ............................. 100Joan Rubin ............................ 100Walter Robinson..................... 100Claire Goss ............................... 36Laure Woods .............................. *Jonathan Hahn ......................... 35Stasia Grose ........................... 250Ginger Walmsley .................... 100Jeffrey & Sueann Stone .......... 100Bruce & Ann Willard ............... 500James Lewis ............................. 25Barbara & Carl Jacobson ........ 100Catherine Cerny .................. 1,000Sybille Katz ................................ *

Barbara Berry ......................... 100Tom & Alison Cooper.................. *Roma Marie Wagner .............. 750Kathleen Mueller.................... 100Cynthia Dusel-Bacon .............. 200Donald & Catherine Coluzzi ....... *Kenneth Lajoie ......................... 50Lynne Fovinci ............................ 75Jane Land ................................... *Don Lowry .................................. *Joan Lane ............................ 2,000Bill & Nancy Ellsworth ................ *Margo Sensenbrenner ................ *Kathleen Elkins & Richard Peterson ........................ *Margaret & James MacNiven ...100Andrea Julian ......................... 300Barbara Ann Morgan.............. 200Anne G. Moser ........................... *Donna MacKowski ................. 100Art & Ruth Barker ................ 2,000James Esposto ............................ *Judy & Doug Adams ................... *Bob & Nancy Luft ..................... 50Denise Gilbert ........................ 250Judy & Les Denend ................. 500Penny & Greg Gallo ................ 500Robin Toews ............................. 35Lina Swisher ........................... 100Bill Wohler .............................. 360Mark Weitzel .............................. *Dorothy Kennedy........................ *Lauren & Julie Mercer ............ 200Sandy & Andy Hall ..................... *Pegasus Family Foundation . 1,000Margaret Markdasilva ................ *Joe & Lulie Zier ...................... 100Erica Crowley ............................. *John & Carmen Quackenbush .... *Barbara & Bob Ells ................. 300Nita & Clay Judd ........................ *Barbara Bessey .......................... *Barbara Kent .............................. *

Fred & Kayleen Miller ............. 100George Comstock & Anne Hillman ................... 1,000Barbara Brennan .................... 250Gail & Susan Prickett.............. 350E. B. Tromovitch ...................... 350Lucy Reid-Krensky .................. 100Mary Cooper .......................... 125Novitsky Family ...................... 100Martha Page .............................. *Mary & Tom Cooper ............... 125Veda Putnam ......................... 200Betty Meissner ....................... 100Robin Ackerman ....................... 50Margaret Melaney ................. 200

In Memory Of

Alan D. Anderson ................... 500Bo Rachel Bennett.................. 100Richard H. & Louise J. Barbour 100Mary & Margaret Koch ............... *Bill Hewlett & Dave Packard ....500Ed Davis ................................. 100Steward Stevens ....................... 50Patty Demetrios ................... 1,500Mr. & Mrs. Angelo F. Atilano & Mr. Joseph Flores .................... *Peter & Marguerite Hurlburt .. 100Annie Strem ............................... *Archie Slater .......................... 100Vern Varenhorst ..................... 100Esther Johnson ........................... *Mary Riviello ............................ 75Marion Softky ............................ *Emel Real ............................... 200Frank & Celine Halet .............. 500Nancy Hood ........................ 2,355

In Honor Of

Mar & Popo Russ ....................... *Robby Babcock ...................... 100Palo Alto Downtown Streets Food Closet ............................ 300Tom Gibboney ............................ *The Liggett Family ...................... *

Thank you for supporting The Almanac Holiday Fund

As of January 12, $130,968 has been raised for the Holiday Fund

DONATE ONLINE: siliconvalleycf.org/almanac-holiday-fund

N E W S

Four local elementary school districts — Woodside, Portola Valley, Las Lomitas and Menlo Park City — have announced kindergarten registration pro-cedures. In all four districts, children who will be 5 years old by Sept. 1 are eligible to attend kinder-garten. In the Woodside and Portola Valley districts, children who turn 5 between Sept. 2 and Dec. 2 are eligible to register for a two-year transitional kinder-garten program.

Las Lomitas district Kindergarten registration in the Las Lomitas School District began on Jan. 7. To register, bring to the Las Lomitas School office, at 299 Alameda De Las Pulgas in Atherton, an original birth certificate or passport, current immunization records, and two forms of proof of resi-dence (utility bills, lease agree-ment or property tax bill). Office hours are 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Las Lomitas will have two kindergarten sessions: from 9 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. and from 10:15 a.m. to 2:05 p.m. Session requests will be taken by email or regular mail starting at 10 p.m. on Feb. 2. Tours of the school for parents of incoming kindergarteners will be offered at 9:45 a.m. on three days: Friday, Jan. 23; Fri-day, Jan. 30; and Thursday, Feb. 12. To reserve a tour, call (650) 854-5900, ext. 0.

Menlo Park district The Menlo Park City School District will begin kindergar-ten registration Feb. 2. Parents should go to their home atten-dance area school to pick up a registration packet. Bring proof of residency (either a driver’s license or a cur-rent utility bill). To determine which school your child should attend, call the district registrar at (650) 321-7140, ext. 5600, or check the school locator map on the district website. Kindergarten orientation will be held at Encinal School on Thursday, April 2, from 6:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. in the Large Multipurpose Room. Laurel School will host a par-

ent meeting at 5:30 p.m. Thurs-day, April 16, in the Multipur-pose Room. Oak Knoll School held its orientation Jan. 15. The districtís Spanish immer-sion program is accepting kin-dergarten applications for the 2015-16 school year. The goal of the program is to provide an opportunity for children to develop bilingual proficiency and academic achievement in Spanish and English. Interested parents must apply to the program during their kin-dergarten registration and will be required to attend a parent information meeting on either Feb. 5 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. or on Feb. 23 from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. at the TERC Building next to the district office at 181 Encinal Ave. in Atherton. For more information on the Spanish Immersion program call Tami Girsky at (650) 321-7140, ext. 5624. Go to mpcsd.org or call the district registrar at (650) 321-7140, ext. 5600, for more infor-mation about kindergarten programs or the registration process.

Portola Valley The Portola Valley School District will hold an informa-tional meeting for adults only on both its transitional and traditional kindergarten pro-grams at 8:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 29, at Ormondale School, 200 Shawnee Pass in Portola Valley. Registration packets will be available at that time. For more information, call 851-1777, ext. 2651.

Woodside Registration packets for the 2015-2016 school year will be available at the Woodside School office following an orien-tation meeting for transitional kindergarten and traditional kindergarten at 8:30 a.m. on March 3, in the Wildcats Room, 3195 Woodside Road. Birth certificate, proof of resi-dency, immunization records and a physicianís report will be required before a child enters school in the fall. Visit woodside.k12.ca.us or call (650) 851-1571 for more information. A

Kindergarten registration time for local schools

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com TheAlmanac 11

N E W S

By Barbara WoodAlmanac Staff Writer

Caltrain’s governing board has approved the envi-ronmental report needed

to go ahead with electrification of the rail service it runs between San Francisco and San Jose, and Atherton isn’t happy about it. A draft of a letter from Ather-ton Mayor Rick DeGolia to Caltrain says the town considers the approval of the environmen-tal documents as putting “high speed rail one step closer to real-ity in Atherton.” Regarding the electrification project itself, Atherton “con-tinues to have concerns related to noise, project timing, tree removal and pruning, (and) locations of wires and poles,” the letter says. The town has also asked Caltrain to help pay for safer gates at Atherton crossings and to give more specifics about its promise to reopen the Ather-ton train station, including train schedules. Atherton’s City Council meets Wednesday, Jan. 21, starting

at 7 p.m. in the council cham-bers at 94 Ashfield Road. On the agenda is discussion of the town’s response to the Jan. 8 approval by the Peninsula Cor-ridor Joint Powers Board of the environmental review and the electrification project. A report to the council from Town Planner Lisa Costa Sand-ers and Community Services Director Michael Kashiwagi says the town staff will work with Caltrain as the electri-fication project is completed to make sure the issues in the mayor’s letter are worked out. However, the report says, “with respect to high-speed rail, our position remains immu-table. The impacts in Atherton are significant and we will stand in front of that train until our concerns are addressed.” Atherton had argued that the environmental report on the electrification project was not adequate because it did not address the environmental effects of high-speed rail, which the town says is inextricably tied to the electrification project.

The report from Ms. Costa Sanders and Mr. Kashiwagi says “the electrification project is dependent on the high speed rail project for funding” and the project is also designed to be compatible with high-speed rail. Several of the concerns Ather-ton had with the draft environ-mental document were addressed in the final version approved by the Caltrain board, including an

agreement to place poles for the electric wires in a way to require removal or pruning of the fewest number of trees. Caltrain also agreed to plant three new trees for each heritage tree it removes from outside of its right-of-way and one new tree for every other tree removed. Also on the council’s Wednes-day agenda: Consideration of spending $8,000 to subscribe to Open Town Hall, an online tool cur-rently used by Menlo Park and Palo Alto to get the opinion of residents on various issues. Final approval of regula-tions on cellphone towers and

other telecommunication facili-ties. The proposed law requires companies to pay the town to place equipment in the town’s right-of-way, to hold public meetings to discuss new facili-ties or major modifications to existing facilities, and to design and site equipment to minimize the impact on neighbors. Presentation of reports on the Peninsula Humane Society, from the town’s community services department; and on the San Mateo County Mosquito and Vector Control District by Atherton’s representative on the district’s board, Mason Brutschy. A

Atherton unhappy about Caltrain electrification project approval

A memorial service will be held Saturday, Jan. 24, in Woodside for John Andrew Muldoon, a former resident of Atherton and Woodside, who died unexpect-edly on Christmas Day at his home in Columbia, California. He was 58. The service celebrating his life will start at 2 p.m. at Indepen-dence Hall, 2955 Woodside Road. Born in San Francisco to Paul and Kathleen Muldoon of Atherton, he attended Woodside Priory School and graduated from Woodside High School.

After the death of his parents, Mr. Muldoon moved to Columbia in Tuolumne County in 1993. He owned and operated Your Win-dow Man, a window cleaning service, for more than 20 years. Mr. Muldoon was passionate about the outdoors, spending many hours boating and fishing on New Melones Lake, the family said. His other love was restoring

old cars, boats and classic motor-cycles. He had a soft spot for animals, opening his home to animals needing adoption and volunteer-ing at the Humane Society of Tuolumne County in Jamestown. Survivors include is his wife, Kristin; his sister, Mary Eliza-beth “Me” Simon; and four nieces and nephews. Memorial donations may be made to the Humane Society of Tuolumne County, P.O. Box 830, Jamestown, CA 95327; or online at hsotc.org/donate.

Woodside memorial for John Muldoon, 58OBITUARY

Obituaries are based on infor-mation provided by the family.

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12 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

C O M M U N I T Y

By Renee BattiAlmanac Associate Editor

The Palo Alto Jazz Alliance is producing its first con-cert since the death last

April of its beloved co-founder, Herb Wong of Menlo Park. But music lovers shouldn’t worry that the Amateur Hour Orches-tra is coming to town to enter-tain them. That’s because for its first event, the Alliance has accepted the Woody Herman Orchestra’s offer to perform a tribute concert to the organiza-tion’s longtime leader — a man known far and wide in the jazz world as Dr. Wong. The concert, which will fea-ture 15 Woody Herman Orches-tra (WHO) members and its

current vocalist, is set for 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 25, at the Menlo-Atherton High School Performing Arts Center. The performance will be directed by Frank Tiberi, who has per-formed with the band since 1969, and took over as leader shortly after Woody Herman’s death in 1987. Event chair Harvey Mittler wrote that Dr. Wong’s wife, Marilyn, received a call from the band’s directors, who pro-posed performing the “ulti-mate” tribute to “the man they revered.” “Woody and Herb were best friends and musical allies for over 40 years until Woody died,” Mr. Mittler said. “Herb remained a close, staunch supporter of the

Woody Her-man Orchestra and its many musicians who carried forth Woody’s legacy as one of the best big bands in the country.” The t ies between Dr. Wong and band members were so strong that the orchestra flew out to play at Herb and Marilyn’s wedding, according to a Jazz Alliance press release. Woody Herman and some of his band members also wrote tunes dedicated to Mr. Wong. Dr. Wong’s work in the jazz world didn’t include profes-sional performances, but that

didn’t diminish his legacy as a star in that universe. He hosted a radio show on the now-defunct KJAZ-FM for nearly 36 years, and continued his annual Christmas program on the airwaves at KCSM-FM until shortly before illness made that tradition no longer possible. He also wrote liner notes for more than 600 jazz recordings — including for Woody Herman recordings. Many Peninsula residents took his popular jazz history course at Palo Alto Adult School, which he taught for 25 years. And they also enjoyed summertime jazz concerts under the sky at the Stanford Shopping Center — a series he created and produced for many years.

Jazz Alliance member Patty Boyle of Menlo Park said a spe-cial feature of the concert will be the participation by three high school jazz students in the WHO’s performance of “The Woodchopper’s Ball.” Tickets to the concert are $40, general; $35 for Jazz Alliance members; and $15 for students. They can be purchased locally at Peninsula Music & Repair in Palo Alto, the Record Man in Redwood City, and Vinyl Solu-tion in San Mateo. They can also be purchased by cash or check only at the door after 6:30 p.m. the day of the event. The M-A Performing Arts Center is at 555 Middlefield Road in Atherton. For more informa-tion, call 650-345-9543.A

Big band swings into town for Herb Wong tribute

Herb Wong

Olivia was the most popular name for girls, and Lucas the most popular name for boys born in San Mateo County in 2014, says Mark Church, San Mateo County’s assessor-county Clerk-Recorder. There were 5,879 babies

born in San Mateo County in 2014. The total number of girls born was 2,827 compared to 2,720 born the year before. The total number of boys born in 2014 was 3,052, compared to 2,872 the year before. The top 10 names for girls

were Olivia, Emma, Sophia, Natalie, Chloe, Isabella, Sofia, Elizabeth, Zoe and Abigail. The top 10 names for boys were Lucas, Alexander, Dan-iel, Benjamin, Ethan, Jacob, Andrew, Noah, Mason and Oliver.

Most popular baby names The police department’s deployment of two fulltime traffic officers in 2014 contrib-uted to a 10 percent drop in collisions, according to Menlo Park staff. Enforcement was concen-trated on school zones, with 19 deployments at Belle Haven

Elementary, 15 at Willow Oaks Elementary, 37 at Oak Knoll Elementary, 13 at La Entrada Middle School, 17 at Hillview Middle School and five at Nativity School. The two officers also conducted road safety education for stu-dents and parents.

Menlo reports 10% drop in collisions

What: You will learn the ins and outs of how the home sale process works including tax information from Tom Vocker CPA!

When: Saturday, Jan 24 9:30 - 11:00 am

Where: Pacific Union 1706 El Camino Real, Suite 220 Menlo Park, Ca

RSVP to Maya Sewald 650.346.1228 [email protected]

Maya & Jason present their

5th Annual Home Sale Seminar!

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 13

C O M M U N I T Y

Moved by a Trinity School students project on Ebola aware-ness, a local family has anony-mously donated 20 Ebola worker protection kits and $30,000 worth of medical supplies through MAP International. Guided by service learn-ing coordinator Kim Thack-er, fourth-grade students at Trinity School in Menlo Park researched the cause and symp-toms of Ebola, and learned about treatment centers built to contain the disease and the dedication of medical personnel helping care for Ebola patients. The students mailed cards to the workers to thank them for their commitment. The students learned about impoverished areas, where peo-ple seek widely for food, and tried

to understand why some people are afraid to get treatment. The fourth-graders received a letter from the Consulate General of the Republic of Libe-ria acknowledging the students’ work in bringing awareness of the Ebola crisis that faces Liberia. The Trinity project on Ebola is part of the school’s service learning program to help stu-dents identify and research local and global issues. The fourth-grade students chose to study the Ebola crisis, sparked by their commitment to confronting problems that hurt children, say school officials. Trinity is a private elementary school in the Episcopal tradition located at 2650 Sand Hill Road in the Sharon Heights subdivi-sion in Menlo Park.

Trinity School students inspire Ebola donation

Photo by Kim Thacker, Trinity School

Grade 4 Trinity School students share their research photos and diorama of an Ebola treatment camp.

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14 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

C O M M U N I T Y

By Sandy BrundageAlmanac Staff Writer

Dr. Norman Coplon, founder of the non-profit Satellite Health-

care and an award-winning nephrologist who taught at Stanford University, died at his Portola Valley home on Jan. 11 following a long illness. He was 77. Born in Syracuse, New York, in 1937, he attended Syracuse University and then medical school at the State University of New York Upstate. He met his future wife of 53 years, Sandra, as she observed him examine a patient as part of her nursing program, according to the family. He asked her out the next day

when her date for the eve-ning left for the restroom. The couple married in 1961. Tak ing a break between the first and second year of residency, Dr. Coplon went to Arizona to serve two years as a resident physician with the Army. In 1966 he and his family moved to California, where he completed his medical train-ing at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco, followed by a fellowship in nephrology at Stanford University School of Medicine. He was named director of Stanford’s Renal Care Unit. In San Jose in 1973, he opened Satellite Dialysis, the first freestanding dialysis facil-ity in California. It became Satellite Healthcare in 1999. Dr. Coplon and his team strived to provide a home-like setting to make patients feel like part of a family. The model proved to be a success and today provides care to more than 6,000 patients across six states. His daughter, Bonnie, described him on the Alma-nac’s Lasting Memories website “as a gregarious man who was

the life of the party and, quite literally at times, a cheerleader of life. He often brought his children to football games at Stanford, where they’d sell pom-poms to fans in the stands. After the games they’d collect the pom-poms to resell at the next game, and donate the day’s earnings to the National Kid-ney Foundation.” In 2000, Dr. Coplon and Sat-ellite Healthcare established the Norman S. Coplon Grants to provide funds to research-ers seeking ways to improve kidney health. He received numerous awards, including the “Martin Wagner Memorial Award” from the National Kidney Foundation in 1979 and the organization’s “Man of the Year” award in 1992. Stan-ford University named him a Distinguished Fellow, and in 2008 endowed the Norman S. Coplon/Satellite Healthcare Professorship in Medicine in the department of Nephrology in his honor. He is survived by wife Sandra; brother Arthur; chil-dren Bonnie Hirsch, Dovid Coplon and Deana Bressel; 13 grandchildren; and a great-grandson. A

Dr. Norman Coplon, nephrologist and innovator, dies at 77

OBITUARYObituaries are based on infor-mation provided by the family.

Dr. Norman Coplon

Betty Christine Wolfe Ever-son, 83, a longtime resident of Menlo Park, died in Provo, Utah on Jan. 7. Ms. Everson was born in Palo Alto and raised in Menlo Park, attending Las Lomitas Elemen-tary School and Sequoia High School before graduating from San Jose State University with degrees in business and English, according to her family. After marrying Idaho native Charles Everson in 1954, she made a home in Menlo Park, although the pair also lived in Saudi Arabia for three years during the 1980s and traveled the world four times. The couple

celebrated 60 years of mar-riage in Octo-ber. Ms. Ever-son’s com-munity ser-vice included working with schools and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. She is survived by husband Charles; daughters Audrey Leonard and Deanne (James) Welch; sisters Beverley and Kathy Wolfe; five grandchil-dren and three great-grand-children.

Betty Everson, Menlo Park resident

Betty Everson

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Page 15: JANUARY 21, 2015| VOL. 50 NO. 20 … · 4 Q TheAlmanac Q TheAlmanacOnline.com Q January 21, 2015 Ken DeLeon CalBRE #01342140 Michael Repka CalBRE #01854880 KDL Mi h l R k ® 650.488.7325

January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com TheAlmanac 15

Everything you need. Kindness included.Sequoia Hospital’s new Pavilion is now open.

Not only will you be treated with the kindness you’ve come to expect, you’ll also be treated at one of the most advanced health care facilities in the Bay Area. Learn more at sequoiapavilion.org.

Page 16: JANUARY 21, 2015| VOL. 50 NO. 20 … · 4 Q TheAlmanac Q TheAlmanacOnline.com Q January 21, 2015 Ken DeLeon CalBRE #01342140 Michael Repka CalBRE #01854880 KDL Mi h l R k ® 650.488.7325

16 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

A beloved husband and father, John Douglas Payne passed

away peacefully at Stanford Hospital on the evening of Sunday,

December 28, 2014 surrounded by his loved ones. John

displayed remarkable strength and courage as he valiantly

fought for over seven years through many health conditions.

Even in the face of these challenges, John’s love for his family

and the life he shared with them only grew stronger with

each passing day. John lived 68 full and rich years, beginning

his journey in San Francisco, where he was born on October

29, 1946 to Winnie Bernice and Thomas Walter Payne. John

had two older brothers, Thomas Payne and Robert Payne.

After spending his early years living in San Francisco, John

moved to Palo Alto with his family, graduating from Palo

Alto High School in 1964 and attending Foothill College in

the following years. John then moved to Menlo Park, where

he lived for over 45 years, the last 32 of which were spent with

his wife Kathy, whom he dearly loved. John worked in the

printing industry for most of his life, where he took a great

deal of pride in his work. A lifelong avid outdoorsman, John

had an adventurous spirit and always chose to spen his free

time in the mountains or at the ocean. In particular, John

spent many happy times in Yosemite, a place that was deeply

important to him. He shared this treasured place with his

loved ones, taking an annual trip to visit some of his favorite

spots, including El Capitan, Yosemite Falls, Half Dome, and

Happy Isles. John’s memory is carried on by his loving wife

Kathy, youngest daughter Jennifer and son-in-law Matthew,

son Benjamin and grandson Dexter, daughter Megan and

granddaughter Annabel, and best feline friend Nelly.

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

John D. Payne Oct. 29.1946 ~ Dec. 28, 2014

Gerry C. Wagstaffe, a lifelong resident of San Mateo

County, died unexpectedly at home on January 9, 2015 at

the age of 55. Gerry was the cherished only daughter of

Gerard and Jean Wagstaffe, both of whom preceded her

in death.

A graduate of St. Francis High School, Gerry received

her Associate of Arts Degree from Foothill College in

2006 and her Bachelor of Arts Degree from San Jose

State in 2012. She was a loyal follower of the San Jose

State Spartans.

Previously an employee of Raychem Corporation,

Gerry was employed by Stanford Hospitals & Clinics

for more than 28 years, most recently as an Inventory

Control Clerk. She traveled widely in her free time.

Gerry was especially appreciative of the care provided

her by the physicians and staff of Kaiser Hospital and

UCSF in her recent kidney transplant.

Gerry is survived by her brother, Dennis Wagstaffe,

his wife Cathy Wagstaffe, and their children, Jeffrey

Wagstaffe and Elizabeth Wagstaffe. Gerry is also

survived by her dear friend, Coulter Cleary, and brothers

Raymond Wagstaffe, James Wagstaffe and Stephen

Wagstaffe. Her brother, John Wagstaffe, preceded her in

her death.

A memorial Mass will be held in her memory on January

23, 2015 at 10:30 a.m. at St. Vincent de Paul Church,

131 Marine View Avenue, Davenport, California.

The family asks that donations in Gerry’s

memory be made to Kainos (for “Pete’s Place”) at

3631 Jefferson Avenue, Redwood City, California.

Gerry C. Wagstaffe

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

Barbara Allen Johnson, 96, a resident of Portola Valley for more than 50 years died peacefully on January 8, 2015.  A dedicated class assistant in first grade for years, she loved Ormondale School and helped young residents both at school and as a home tutor.  She mentored disabled children. She was a friend of Portola Valley library and active in the local informal jigsaw puzzle swap. She walked daily and shopped at the local markets.  She made time to chat.  As a member of the Stanford community, she volunteered at the Stanford Treasure Market and the thrift shop on campus, raising funds for the Children’s Hospital.

Barbara Allen grew up in Wilmington, Massachusetts and graduated from Simmons College in Boston. While at Simmons, she met her beloved Bill (William Summer Johnson) who was attending Harvard.  They married and moved to Wisconsin and then to Stanford where Bill taught organic chemistry. They made Portola Valley their home in 1960, but her heart never completely left Wilmington, Mass. 

She loved, and was loved by, Portola Valley, her friends, her cousins, and the animals, and all of the outdoors that she explored every day. She was devoted to her adopted pets from animal rescue, miniature house collections, and oil painting.

She is survived by her cousins, Carlyn Ellms of N. Falmouth, MA, Chip Ellms of Ballston Spa, NY, and George Lindholdt of Muir Beach, CA.

Barbara Allen Johnson

C O M M U N I T Y

Betty Christine Wolfe Everson passed away in Provo, Utah, on January 7, 2015. Born in Palo Alto, California, on September 11, 1931, she was raised in Menlo Park, where she attended Las Lomitas Elementary and Sequoia High Schools. She graduated from San Jose State in business and English. In 1954 she married Charles (Chuck) Everson, from Shelley, Idaho. In October 2014 they celebrated their 60th anniversary.

Betty’s greatest passion was her family, always showing them selfless compassion and love. A member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Betty served faithfully in the church. She and Chuck lived in Saudi Arabia for three years in the 1980s. During that period, they traveled around the world four times—a dream fulfilled for her.

She is survived by her husband Charles; daughters Audrey Leonard and Deanne (James) Welch; five grandchildren: Heather Leonard, New York; Clayton Leonard (Susan), Hawaii; Charlie Leonard, Utah; Nicholas and Jameson Welch, Palo Alto; and three great-grandchildren: Hailey, Grant, and Kimberly Sue Leonard. Betty is also survived by her sisters Beverley Wolfe (Santa Cruz) and Kathy Wolfe (Barb Verhage), Almaden, CA.

Betty Christine Wolfe EversonSeptember 11, 1931 – January 7, 2015

P A I D O B I T U A R YP A I D O B I T U A R Y

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Woodside district sells $13.5 million in tax-free bonds The Woodside Elementa-ry School District has sold the $13.5 million in bonds approved by the voters in June at interest rates low enough to save taxpayers some money. District officials say a com-bination of an excellent bond rating, local investment, and favorable market conditions allowed the district to sell bonds that will pay investors between 2 percent and 5 per-cent of tax-free interest. Taxpayers will save $20 per year for each $1 million in assessed value of their prop-erty, because the tax rate will be $ 22.01 per $100,000 instead of the $24.05 per $100,000 that had been estimated, according to the district. Bond money will go to new preschool classrooms, a new combination theater and gym-nasium, and a new design lab for hands-on projects, with constructions scheduled to begin in June. Bond money will also pay for deferred maintenance. Projected completion dates are early September 2015 for the preschool, the end of Sep-tember 2015 for the design lab, and spring 2016 for the new multi-purpose building. “We are very excited to begin improving our school,” said Wendy Warren Roth, the district’s governing board president.

Pet of the weekBy Scott Delucchi, Peninsula Humane Society.

Nope, this isn’t a Geico ad and this isn’t a gecko.

Meet Iggy, a young igua-na with beautiful green and brown scales available for adoption from Peninsula Humane Society’s Center for Compassion in Burlingame. Iggy is a great lizard who is tolerant of handling, once he knows his handler. Iggy will need daily attention in order to become more com-fortable in a new environment. Iguanas grow up to 6 feet long and have specific light and enclosure needs, so Iggy would do best with an experienced owner who understands how to take care of these amazing lizards. Go to phs-spca.org or visit the Center for Compassion at 1450 Rollins Road in Burlin-game for more information.

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 17

This information is based on reports from the Atherton Police Department, Menlo Park Police Department and San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office. Under the law, people charged with offenses are consid-ered innocent unless convicted. Police received the reports on the dates shown.

ATHERTON

Prowler: Two different residents reported seeing a man on their properties. They described him as slender and Hispanic, about 25 to 31 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches to 5 feet 11 inches tall, and weigh-ing 140 to 155 pounds. The first incident was on Sutherland Drive, where police said the man walked around and looked in windows. Soon after, a man reportedly entered and walked around a property on Mesa Court, police said. Homeowners said

they thought the man was hiding in the pool house, but he was not found, police said. Jan. 17.Unlocked door:Police investigated a report of an unlocked door and windows in a Maple Avenue house, believed to have happened between Dec. 27 and Jan. 3. The home did not appear disturbed. Jan. 15.Theft: A resident of Laburnum Drive said her purse was stolen from her vehicle near Alpine Road and I-280. When the woman returned home her spare key, which had been in her purse, was in the front door’s deadbolt lock. However, police said they found no signs of entry into the home and nothing was missing. Jan. 12.Charges dropped: Drug charges against a Menlo College student who was arrest-ed in November have been dropped, while another student faces an arraignment on drug charges Feb. 6. Charges against Joel Matthew Palabrica, 22, from Everett,

Washington, were dismissed at a prelimi-nary hearing due to lack of evidence. Jan. 14. Dominic Ezekiel Jackson, 21, from Bellevue, Washington, will be arraigned on charges of possession of a controlled substance for sale, possession of mari-juana for sale, and conspiracy to commit a crime, according to San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe. He remains out of custody without bail. The two men were arrested Nov. 10 by officers from the San Mateo County Narcotics Task Force with the assistance of Atherton police. Police said 20 bags of cocaine, 77 Xanax pills, jars of marijuana, and $925 in cash were found in a dorm room the pair occupied.

WOODSIDE

Burglary: Someone deactivated an alarm system and evaded a guard dog to steal jewelry from a home on La Questa Way. Jan. 8.

Burglary attempted: The rear door of a storage closet failed to provide a would-be burglar with access to a house on Brookwood Road. The homeowner returned from vacation to find the stor-age door removed from the closet, which does not lead to the interior of the house. The damage to the door was estimated at $300, but nothing was stolen and there were no other signs of forced entry. Jan. 8.Theft: A pair of glasses, a pair of sun-glasses, the car’s registration and, inex-plicably, the owner’s manual, were taken from a vehicle left unlocked on Black Ridge Court. Jan. 9.Tow: A white Ford F150 parked in a no parking, tow-away zone on Canada Road was in fact towed. Jan. 10.

MENLO PARK

Vandalism: Someone shot the front win-dow of a home on Willow Road with a BB

gun. Jan. 9.Burglary: Two people stole bottles of wine worth more than $2,100. Jan. 10.Assault with deadly weapon: Two men in a gold Honda Accord allegedly tied to a burglary in Alameda County rammed a Menlo Park police car in East Palo Alto before dumping the vehicle and fleeing on foot. Police arrested the passenger, 20-year-old Jatniel Espinoza Arias, of East Palo Alto, but did not locate the driver. Jan. 14.Auto Burglary:

Someone smashed a window and stole a purse from inside a vehicle on Marsh Road. Jan. 15.

Someone broke a window and took items from inside a vehicle at Bayfront Park. Jan. 15.

Someone rummaged through a vehicle left unlocked overnight on Iris Lane. Jan. 15.

C O M M U N I T Y

Jacquelin Baumgarten Mitchell of Atherton died on December 29, 2014, after a brief illness.

She is survived by her husband, Lincoln A. Mitchell, daughter Rebekah Ann Mitchell of Kentfield, sister Rebekah Ann Bashford of Idyllwild, and nephew Morris D. Mitchell and niece Elizabeth D. Mitchell, both of Soquel.

Jackie, then “Miss Baumgarten,” taught kindergarten at Hillview School and then Encinal School in the Menlo Park School District from 1955 to 1961. She subsequently substituted in the Menlo Park and Palo Alto Unified School Districts as “Mrs. Mitchell” from 1962 until their daughter was born in 1969.

Jackie was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, on December 31, 1931 and graduated from the Packer School in Brooklyn Heights, New York, where she made her debut in 1949. She also graduated from Southern Seminary in Buena Vista, Virginia, and the Denver School of Education in 1955.

She met her husband on Friday, October 13, 1961, when he was a third year student at Stanford Law School. They were married two and a half months later on December 29. She died on their 53rd wedding anniversary.

He described their marriage as a 53-year love affair and said that both of them would have signed up for another 53 year tour if they could.

Jackie was active in the Junior Leagues of Brooklyn Heights and Palo Alto Mid-Peninsula, doing her volunteer work at the San Francisco Airport Travelers Aid in the evenings to accommodate her teaching schedule.

She joined the Woodside-Atherton Auxiliary to the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford in 1977 and was the complex director from 1994 to 1996 and in 2002 for the Allied Arts Guild, which the Auxiliary operates on Arbor Road in Menlo Park. She leased and managed the various shops on the property for the benefit of the hospital. She also chaired the Friends of Allied Arts in 1998, 1999 and in 2001.

She and her husband, and often their daughter Rebekah, together with the family Airedale, cruised their 26-foot boat in the Pacific Northwest during most Augusts for 40 years, from the San Juan Islands north through the coastal waters of British Columbia and southeast Alaska to Skagway, Sitka and Glacier Bay. They never tired of the snow-capped peaks, pristine forests and ever present salmon, eagles and orcas and the occasional brown (grizzly) bear.

Jackie never forgot her students and was able to recall each of them by name and description more than 50 years later. She loved every last one of them.

Her husband practiced law in Palo Alto for 50 years, always with her support. They were members of the Delta Yacht Club and the Ladera Oaks Swim Tennis and Fitness Club.

A memorial service, followed by a celebration of life, will be held on Friday, January 23 at 2:00pm at the Trinity Episcopal Church, 330 Ravenswood Avenue, Menlo Park. Burial will be private.

Jacquelin MitchellDecember 31, 1931-December 29, 2014

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

William “Bill” Noren died peacefully at Stanford Hospital on January 5, 2015 due to complications of a ruptured aorta and subsequent stroke. Bill lived in the Niles Community of Fremont with his wife Lola and son Skyler. The phrases “Gentle kindness,” “Kind and gentle soul,” “Sweet, unassuming, gentle, caring, wonderful father and husband” were some of the quotes received from friends and acquaintances upon hearing of his passing.

Bill was born to Don and Merillyn Noren in Concord, CA on June 5, 1960. He attended Lincoln Elementary, McKinley Junior High School and Sequoia High School in Redwood City. He attended Cañada College and San Jose State University to pursue his love of geology. He was an avid gold miner, taking his gold pan with him on camping trips and gold-mining excursions in the Sierra Foothills.

In the late 1990s he moved to Garberville, near Humboldt, where he received a certification in permaculture at the Heartwood Institute. To satisfy his love of adventure, in 1997 he journeyed to Australia where he lived in a tent, in the Australian bush, for a year. He came back with hundreds of stories and pictures of his travels.

He re-met his wife Lola at their twenty-year Sequoia High School reunion. They had gone to junior high school and high school together. Not having attended any previous reunions, he came to that reunion because something inside him urged him to go. It was the same feeling for Lola, who did not want to attend, but something urged her to go. Having just returned from Australia that day and reading the invitation, he did not have time to clean up and put on a fancy outfit as he rushed out the door for the 5-hour drive from Garberville to the Bay Area. He arrived at the reunion with a long beard, a Hawaiian shirt, shorts and hiking boots. But he and Lola felt a connection they had never felt before, and soon fell in love.

They married in April 2002 and in September 2003 their beautiful son, Skyler was born. Bill was a baseball dad, helping coach his son’s little league team. He was excited to help the kids and always encouraged them. For his son’s 4th grade class, he shared his love and knowledge of gold mining. He taught his son the importance of cherishing and appreciating nature, protecting the environment, and being kind to others. Bill was always there for him and was an exceptional role model. His dream of retirement was to have acreage in a wooded area in Oregon and live off the land.

Bill is survived by his wife Lola, son Skyler, his mother Merillyn, sisters Kimberley Dawn Findley and Cheryl Webster, nephews Christopher Warren Haskins and Andrew James Haskins, and brother-in-law Roger Findley. A memorial service will be held on January 30 at 2 p.m. at Menlo Park Presbyterian Church, 950 Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Greenpeace. An educational trust has been set up for Bill’s son Skyler and checks can be written to Skyler Z. Noren and sent to Lola Noren.

William “Bill” NorenJune 5, 1960 – January 5, 2015

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18 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

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Skylonda Mutual Water System127 Blakewood Way, California 94062

Telephone 650 851-0154. Email: [email protected] January 6, 2015

IMPORTANT NOTIFICATIONEste informe contiene información muy importante sobre su agua potable. Tradúzcalo o hable con alguien que lo entienda bien.Dear Water User,The Skylonda Mutual Water System has been cited by the State Water Resources Control Board Division of Drinking Water for distributing water containing quantities of trihalomethanes above the Maximum Contaminant Level of 80 ug/L (80part per billion.) NOTE: the contaminant level is calculated based on a running annual average of quarterly samples. See the table below:

TTHMs are a byproduct of the reaction of chlorine disinfectant with natural organic and inorganic matter in the water. The chlorine disinfectant is injected into the water in our system to protect from biological contamination.We routinely monitor for total trihalomethanes (TTHM) in our distribution system. These measurements tell us whether or not further treatment is needed to remove disinfection byproduct precursors from the water supply. We are currently developing a Corrective Action Plan (CAP) to mitigate the condition.

What should I do? You do not need to switch to bottled water.

This is not an emergency.some people who drink water containing trihalomethanes in excess of the MCL over many years could experience liver, kidney, or central nervous system problems and increased risk of cancer.If you have other health issues concerning the consumption of this water you may wish to consult your doctor.

web site: http://water.epa.gov/drink/contaminants/basicinformation/trihalomethane.cfm.If you have tenants, please inform them of this.

With further questions please contact:Jim Smith, SMWS Board President, 851-1358. Nicole Adan, SMWS Board Vice President, 851-2192. Terry Adams, Chief Water Operator, (650) 704-4009. Karen Nishimoto, CDPH, (510) 620-3461.

Date of Sample Result (ug/L) Running Average (ug/L)

9/23/13 81.44 81.44 = [>80ug/L]

12/12/13 58.67 70.063/13/13 82.4 74.176/26/14 122.3 86.20 = [>80ug/L]

9/11/14 84.21 85.80 = [>80ug/L]

10/31/14 124.11 92.19 = [>80ug/L]

11/13/14 116.94 95.72 = [>80ug/L]

C O M M U N I T Y

Go to AlmanacNews.com/calendar to see more local calendar listings

Classes/WorkshopsBeginning Clothing Construction Tues-days, Jan. 27-May 26, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. $138 (plus supplies and student fees). Canada College, 4200 Farm Hill Blvd., Woodside. Call 306-3370. canadacollege.edu/fashionMath Olympiad classes designed to foster a love of math and build analytical skills for ages 7 to 8 and 9 to 11. Fridays, Jan. 23-March 13, 4-5 p.m. (ages 7-8), 5:15-6:15 p.m. (ages 9-11). $224 resident; $301 non-resident; plus $15 materials fee. Arrillaga Family Recreation Center, 700 Alma St., Menlo Park. www.men-lopark.org/registrationPersuasive writing and reading courses Saturdays, Jan. 24-March 16, 9:30-10:30 a.m. (ages 7-8); 10:45-11:45 a.m. (ages 9-11). $224 resident; $301 non-resident; plus $25 materi-als fee. Arrillaga Family Recreation Center, 700 Alma St., Menlo Park. www.menlopark.org/registration

Clubs/Meetings-

Hour-long conversations discuss-ing cycles of sexual abuse in families. Jan. 21, 6:30-7:30 p.m.; Jan. 22, 9:15-10:15 a.m. Free. Bethany Lutheran Church, 1095 Cloud Ave., Menlo Park. Call 854-5897. www.facebook.com/LifetreeCafeMP

Kids & Families introduces babies

to Spanish through stories, songs and rhymes. Jan. 26, 11 a.m. Free. Portola Valley Library, 765 Portola Road, Portola Valley. Call 851-0560.

, innovative school for grades 4 and 5 in Portola Valley, holds open house to discuss philosophy, curriculum. Presentation at 2 p.m. Registration requested. Jan. 24, 1:30-3:30 p.m. Free. Creekside Learn-ing Lab, 884 B-1 Portola Road, Portola Valley. www.creeksidelearninglab.orgFamily Movie Night Atherton Library screens Disney classic, “Sleeping Beauty.” Doors open at 6:45 p.m. Jan. 30, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Atherton Library, 2 Dinkelspiel Station Lane, Atherton. Call 328-2422. Red Panda Acrobat performance Wayne Huey gives performance of Chinese acrobat-ics, accompanied by traditional music. Jan. 21, 4-5 p.m. Free. Portola Valley Library, 765 Portola Road, Portola Valley. Call 851-0560.

On Stage Palo Alto Players present

“Eurydice,” a contemporary re-imagining of the Greek myth of Eurydice and Orpheus that explores themes of memory, love and loss. Recommended for viewers ages 12 and older. Jan. 16-Feb. 1, Thursday, 7 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. $31-$45. Lucie Stern Theater, 1305 Middle-field Road, Palo Alto. Call 329-0891. www.paplayers.org

Greek tragedy by Aeschylus. Jan. 15-Feb. 1, Thursday-Saturday, 8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. $22. Dragon Theatre, 2120 Broadway St., Redwood City. www.dragonproductions.net

Talks & AuthorsAuthor Armistead Maupin visits Kepler’s to discuss ninth and final novel of his Tales of the City series, “The Days of Anna Madrigal,” in which the 92-year-old transgender San Fran-ciscan delves into her past. Jan. 28, 7:30 p.m. $15 general. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.brown-papertickets.com/event/959556

Book deals with break-throughs in biology and neuroscience that point to selfless tendencies in the brain, as well as how selfless behavior can be encouraged. Jan. 26, 7:30 p.m. Free. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.keplers.com/event/elizabeth-svoboda

chats with Ann Packer about her debut novel, “A Small Indiscretion,” which explores themes of desire, obsession and mistakes that return to haunt their per-petrators. Jan. 27, 7:30 p.m. Free. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.keplers.com/event/jan-ellison-conversation-ann-packerAuthor John McQuaid discusses his new book, “Tasty: The Art and Science of What We Eat,” which investigates the mysteries of flavor and looks at kitchens, supermarkets, farms,

restaurants, food corporations and science labs. Jan. 21, 7:30 p.m. Free. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.keplers.com/event/john-mcquaid

Veteran civil rights activist Maria Gitin will give a talk and sign her book, “This Bright Light of Ours: Stories from the Voting Rights Fight.” Her activism has ranged from participation in the voting rights marches in Selma to involvement in (and awards from) organizations including the NAACP. Jan. 28, noon-1:30 p.m. Free. Black Community Ser-vices Center, Brandon Community Room, 418 Santa Teresa St., Stanford. events.stanford.edu/events/481/48199/

Michael Shermer will come to Kepler’s Books to discuss and sign his book “The Moral Arc: How Science and Reason Lead Humanity Toward Truth, Justice, and Free-dom,” a work of skepticism, science and rea-son that has been praised by figures including Jared Diamond, Steven Pinker and Lawrence M. Krauss. Feb. 2, 7:30 p.m. $10 student; $20 general. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.brownpaper-tickets.com/event/1027111

Nir Eyal will speak about his new book “Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products,” which provides a how-to guide for building better products. Jan. 22, 7:30 p.m. Free. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.keplers.com/event/nir-eyal

Sandip Roy will speak in conversa-tion with Richard Rodriguez about his debut work of fiction, “Don’t Let Him Know,” which captures multiple generations of immigrant family life. Feb. 4, 7:30 p.m. Free. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.keplers.com/event/sandip-roy-conversation-richard-rodriguez

Political scientist Francis Fuku-yama will give a lecture at Stanford called “A State of Courts and Parties,” in which he will argue that the power and quality of the Ameri-can state declined in the second half of the 20th century, due to the executive’s subordi-nation to courts and Congress. Jan. 22, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Cubberley Auditorium, 485 Lasuen Mall, Stanford. Call 736-6247. ethicsinsociety.stanford.edu

Len Materman, executive director of the San Francisquito Creek Joint Powers Authority, will discuss the alternatives being considered by the SAFER Bay Project to provide further tidal flood pro-tection and reduce flood insurance costs in south San Mateo County and Palo Alto. Jan. 28, 7-9 p.m. Free. Arrillaga Family Recreation Center, Oak Room, 700 Alma St., Menlo Park. www.lwvssmc.org

Lienwand This Stanford Executive Briefing will feature Paul Liewand, a professor from the Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management, who will discuss how com-panies can gain on their competitors by using a capabilities-driven strategy. Jan. 21, 7:30-9 a.m. $60. Stanford Faculty Club, 439 Lagunita Drive, Stanford. Call 725-3330. breakfastbrief-ings.stanford.edu

Teen Activities Young

adult author Marissa Meyer will attend a special Lunar Ball at Kepler’s Books, where she will share and sign her newest book “Fairest,” the prequel to her series The Lunar Chronicles. There will also be a costume contest, activities, giveaways and light refresh-ments. Feb. 3, 7 p.m. $15 general. Kepler’s Books, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park. Call 324-4321. www.brownpapertickets.com/event/1047642

The Menlo Park Library’s book club program for ages 12 to 18 will meet this winter to vote for which book the club will read. Attendees are encouraged to bring book suggestions to the first meet-ing. Snacks will be provided. Registration is required. Jan. 24, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Menlo Park Public Library, 800 Alma St., Menlo Park. Call 330-2530. menlopark.org/calendar.aspx?EID=816

Et Alia Cantor Arts Center

exhibit, “Photographers from Iran and the Arab World,” introducing 12 photographers’ works that span from photojournalism to fine art. Wednesday-Monday, Jan. 28-May 4, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Thursday til 8 p.m. Free. Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way, Stanford. museum.stanford.edu/news_room/she-who-tells.html

CALENDAR

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January 21, 2015 TheAlmanacOnline.com The Almanac 19

Almanac readers reached deeper into their pockets this holiday season to help their less-fortunate neighbors with food, housing assistance, job-skills training and

other needs through the Almanac’s Holiday Fund. Reader dona-tions, along with contributions from several local foundations, totaled about $156,000 in this season’s fundraising effort. That’s about $4,000 more than was donated last year. The funds will be split evenly among the 10 beneficiaries — nonprofits that serve people in need on the Midpeninsula. Since its launch in 1993, the Holiday Fund has raised more than $3 million for such groups, which often struggle to meet the needs of families and individuals who might be down on their luck and unable to get by without a helping hand. In addition to individuals who have donated to the Holiday Fund over the past two months, the Rotary Club of Menlo Park Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation also supported the effort. The donations are handled by the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, which doesn’t charge for administration of the program, ensuring that your gifts go straight to the nonprofits. Here are the 10 groups that will each receive a check for approximately $15,600 this year:

Boys & Girls Clubs of the PeninsulaWith locations in Menlo Park and the North Fair Oaks neighbor-hood in Redwood City, this organization provides academic and after-school support and activities for 1,750 at-risk K-12 kids. Par-ticipants attend programs at least twice a week during the school year and receive tutoring, mentoring, and academic support.

Ecumenical Hunger ProgramThis program provides emergency food, clothing and house-hold essentials support, and sometimes financial assistance, to families, regardless of religious background. At Thanksgiving and Christmas time, the program provides baskets to more than 2,000 households.

Project Read-Menlo ParkProject Read offers free literacy services to adults in the Menlo Park area. It trains volunteers to work one-on-one with students wishing to improve their basic reading, writing and English lan-guage skills so they can achieve their goals and function more effectively at home, at work, and in the community.

Ravenswood Family Health CenterThe center provides primary medical and preventive health

care at clinics in Belle Haven and East Palo Alto. It also oper-ates a mobile clinic at school sites. Most of the 17,000 registered patients are low-income and uninsured, and live in the Belle Haven, East Palo Alto, and North Fair Oaks areas.

St. Anthony’s Padua Dining RoomSt. Anthony’s serves hundreds of hot meals six days a week to peo-ple in need. It also offers emergency food and clothing assistance. St. Anthony’s is the largest dining room for the needy between San

Francisco and San Jose.

Second Harvest Food BankSecond Harvest is the largest collector and dis-tributor of food on the Peninsula, distributing

about 52 million pounds of food last year. Thanks to donations from individuals and businesses, it distributes food to more than 250,000 people each month through more than 770 agencies and sites in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties.

InnVision Shelter NetworkThis nonprofit serves thousands of homeless families and indi-viduals every year as they work toward self-sufficiency and seek permanent housing. It provides temporary housing and a range of support services, with 18 sites in Silicon Valley and on the Peninsula.

StarVistaStarVista serves more than 32,000 people in San Mateo County with counseling, prevention, early intervention, education and residential programs. It also provides crisis intervention and suicide prevention services, including a 24-hour suicide crisis hotline.

St. Francis CenterThe center provides services for families in need, with the goal of helping them live in dignity and become self-supporting mem-bers of the community. It serves about 2,400 people monthly with services including low-income housing, food and clothing, shower and laundry, education, and counseling.

JobTrainJobTrain provides training and job-placement services for those at risk, including the long-term unemployed, the home-less, marginalized youth, returning parolees, and those recov-ering from drug and alcohol abuse.

Holiday Fund support strong this season

School inequality robs kids of their futureEditor: Silicon Valley, Menlo Park, Facebook, Tech Moguls, Star-buck’s, what’s not to like? A great place to raise a family and best of all the schools are great, thus positioning its chil-dren for the future. Except in the Belle Haven community, which is also located in the city

of Menlo Park, its child is not a part of the Menlo Park City School District but is in the Ravenswood City School Dis-trict. Given a choice I wonder how many parents whose kids attend schools on the west side of the 101 freeway in Menlo Park would choose to let their kids attend school in the Ravenswood School District. The first years of a child’s edu-cation lay the ground work for his or her future. They will have an effect on the child’s whole life. That maxim doesn’t just hold true for the children on the

west side of 101; it is also just as true for the children on the Bay side of 101 in the community of Belle Haven. How dare anyone rob these kids of their future; how dare anyone diminish any child’s future? I’ve heard all the arguments in the attempt to justify this segregated system, but it all boils down to the same thing: “You People Stay Away!” Unfortunately Menlo Park is not unique in this regard; there are segregated school systems all over our nation and they’re growing. It’s especially painful

in Menlo Park because this city and its school system have the resources to correct the problem but won’t. The few decision-makers who have looked into this problem were and are not popular. Many look at the violence in cities across the country and pretend that they don’t know why the people are so angry. I say, first look at their families, but always, always, always look at their school system.

Matt HenryHollyburne Avenue

Menlo Park

IDEAS, THOUGHTS AND OPINIONS ABOUT LOCAL ISSUES

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20 TheAlmanac TheAlmanacOnline.com January 21, 2015

WWW.331GREENROAD.COM

RARE WOODSIDE 91+ ACRE ESTATEPROPERTY CAN BE SOLD AS 2 SEPARATE PARCELS

LOCATED JUST 2 MILES FROM THE TOWN OF WOODSIDE

Information deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. Square footage and/or acreage information contained herein has been received from seller, existing reports, appraisals, public records and/or other sources deemed reliable. However, neither seller nor listing agent has verified this information. If this information is important to buyer in determining whether to buy or to purchase

price, buyer should conduct buyer’s own investigation.

MARY GULLIXSONCalBRE 00373961

[email protected]

BRENT GULLIXSONCalBRE 01329216

[email protected]


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