59.6 F
Scotts Valley
September 10, 2025

October

Now that the devastating CZU Lightning Complex fire is 100 percent contained and evacuation orders have been lifted, our County is shifting its focus swiftly toward recovery and resiliency. We do so with those who lost their homes at the top of our minds and in our hearts.

Letter: Shame on you

EDITOR,

Commentary: Mayor’s thoughts for 2010, 2011

I would like to wish everyone a merry Christmas, happy New Year and happy holidays. We all celebrate this special time of year differently, and in whichever way you choose to enjoy your family and friends, I hope nothing but the best for you all.

Scotts Valley embarks on $1M road project

On June 4 at the Henfling’s stage at the Redwood Mountain Faire, a local bluegrass group called Bean Creek got the all-ages crowd dancing to multi-part harmony set to fiddle and banjo notes. Three days later, Scotts Valley Council finally pulled the trigger on a...

Valley Churches United to mark 40 years with Ruby Gala

As anniversary gifts go, the good stuff comes later in the relationship. The traditional first anniversary present is paper, the 10th anniversary is tin or aluminum, and the 16th anniversary brings wax or silverware. The folks at Valley Churches United (VCU) are skipping straight to...

Landauer looks to join list of SLV elite

Press-Banner

Datebook

- Submit Datebook items to [email protected] or drop off press releases or photos at 5215 Scotts Valley Drive, Ste. F, Scotts Valley 95066. Deadline is 5 p.m. Tuesday. Entries are subject to editing, and publication is not guaranteed.

SV Town Center project back in play

The Scotts Valley City Council’s unanimous actions on Sept. 21 to get what has become known as the “Town Center Project” had already been decided before the meeting, according to those familiar with the process.

Leaking water tank repairs a year away

As you walk up the blacktop service road from Graham Hill Road in Felton, you begin to hear the sound about 50 yards away from the large, round redwood water storage tank, owned by the San Lorenzo Valley Water District:The sound of running water, as if multiple outdoor hose faucets or outdoor showers had been left on.That sound has been disturbing the hilltop serenity of this place for at least seven years, perhaps longer.Water is pumped into the tank by the district, to provide water pressure for homes and fire hydrants in the sandhills overlooking Felton.The water district for several years has had replacement of this tank on its list of needed capital improvement projects, but it hasn’t had the money – nearly $1.7 million – to do the job.It also has had to identify ways to protect endangered plants and animals in the area.Through drought years and rainy seasons, the water has poured out of the bottom and sides of the large round structure, from cracks, holes, and seams, creating a constantly running stream around the bottom of the tank, and into a specially made catch basin and back into the aquifer.There has been no exact estimate of the water lost, but it’s likely in the thousands of gallons. Picture a half dozen homes that left their bathtub faucets or sprinkler systems running nonstop, for seven years.The site is located between the closed Hanson Quarry and the Santa Cruz County Probation Center and juvenile detention facility. The water district calls the tank, the “Probation Tank.”This month, the district moved a step closer to the planned replacement of the leaking 100,000-gallon redwood tank with a 527,000-gallon welded steel tank by holding a hearing on a plan to mitigate any damage the construction project might do to several endangered plant and animal species: the Ben Lomond spineflower and Ben Lomond buckwheat, the Santa Cruz kangaroo rat, the Zayante band-winged grasshopper, and of course, the now-infamous Mt. Hermon June Beetle. No one spoke at the hearing.The next step is for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Commission to approve the plan, and release the project for construction permits.A similar process at the nearby Scotts Valley Middle School caused a more-than-one-year delay in construction of the new school.The water district is hopeful the tank could be replaced in 2018 at the earliest. Meanwhile, water continues to pour out of the tank, day and night.The district in 2016 imposed a “drought surcharge” of $1 for each unit of water, in hopes of building up depleted capital reserves to fund projects like the Probation Tank replacement. This month, it begins discussion of whether to retain the drought surcharge, and of how much capital improvement money to build into a probable multi-year rate hike.

Letters: Kids should come first

EDITOR,

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Felton Fire Protection District

Felton Fire District to review parcel tax proposal at meeting Thursday

Felton Fire Protection District (FFPD) Board of Directors has scheduled a special meeting on Thursday, Sept. 11, at 6 p.m. to discuss a proposed...