The Mercury News

Mayor: Focus must be on housing, transporta­tion and immigrant rights

- By John Orr jorr@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The new mayor of Mountain View says he believes the City Council already has set a good course for the coming year.

Lenny Siegel said major issues facing the city are housing, transporta­tion and protecting residents against the anti-immigrant actions of the Trump administra­tion.

“We’ve already pretty much set a course on building a lot of not just housing, but new, denser neighborho­ods, expanding the housing supply significan­tly,” he said. “We just have to make sure that it is done right. Mountain View, at least, is trying to solve the regional housing crisis.”

A key to accomplish­ing that is the recently approved precise plan for the North Bayshore area, where almost 10,000 new homes are to be built along with new office space and retail uses, Siegel said.

Residentia­l buildings there will be allowed to be as tall as 15 stories.

“Not all the buildings will be that tall,” Siegel noted. “It’s not going to be a monolithic developmen­t. Mountain View already has a couple of 11-story buildings that nobody seems to notice. The developmen­t won’t be overwhelmi­ng.

“We’re trying to set an example in building mixeduse neighborho­ods that are walkable. Given the challenges of traffic and reducing traffic, it’s the only way to go,” he added.

And what comes along with that new developmen­t — in North Bayshore and elsewhere in the city — is the need for improved transporta­tion, Siegel said.

More bicycle lanes have already been installed, Siegel said, and the city will continue that trend.

In fact, Siegel — who is often seen riding his bicycle around the town and carries his helmet into meetings as a way to bring attention to biking — said he plans to hold monthly “Rides with Lenny,” so that “people can see the state of our bicycle infrastruc­ture.”

“I find we get a different perspectiv­e of the city at the speed of a bicycle,” he said.

The city meanwhile has initiated studies on auto-

mated transporta­tion for one or two corridors leading from North Bayshore to the Castro Street downtown area.

“Mountain View has become a destinatio­n city,” Siegel said. “But we can’t add any more cars to downtown Mountain View. There’s no space for them.”

That’s why the city is developing what Siegel called a “conceptual master plan” for creating a multimodal transporta­tion center at Castro Street to become a gateway. There’ll be undergroun­d parking, offices, retail and residences above. Caltrain and and Santa Clara Valley Transporta­tion Authority’s light rail already use the station, and a new automated system from North Bayshore would also connect there.

Siegel said the city has been studying different automated transporta­tion systems, including an elevated monorail, and is hoping to develop some sort of public-private partnershi­p to pay for it.

Some council members have been talking with their counterpar­ts from the cities of Cupertino and Sunnyvale about extending such a system along Highway 85.

“In other cities and countries,” Siegel said, “transporta­tion has been built by such partnershi­ps. Transit has to be paid for by companies like Google and Apple — they are generating the traffic, they are the ones that will benefit from the transporta­tion, and they have money.

“Google is responsibl­e for a lot of our problems,” Siegel said, “but Google usually steps up and tries to help solve the problems. Apple has a very poor record of contributi­ng to local communitie­s.”

Siegel expressed pride in the activism he sees in Mountain View, especially regarding the protection of immigrant rights.

“After Trump declared his immigratio­n ban, a bunch of us, about a thousand, went to the San Francisco airport to protest it, on a Monday,” Siegel said. “The next day, I gave a speech at Google in Mountain View. It was a rally, organized by Google employees, and supported by management. There were 2,000 people there. The same chants, the same signs as at the airport, but fewer gray hairs.

“The tech workers, the younger tech workers, the driving force of the industry, represent a fresh air politicall­y in this area. I hesitate to say ‘progressiv­e,’ because the whole left-right spectrum idea is out of date. …. But, yes, there is support from my generation, but also a lot of support from younger tech workers. …

“I was an activist at Stanford in the ’60s,” Siegel said. “Back in the ’60s, Stanford and Palo Alto were centers of activism. It’s interestin­g to see people with activist background­s, companies, the Chamber of Commerce, all have similar positions on Trump and immigratio­n. The companies value the contributi­ons of immigrants from all over the world.

“And Mountain View has stood up, to challenge the Trump administra­tion and the Republican Congress on these issues. I suspect we’ll have to keep doing it,” Siegel said.

“After Trump declared his immigratio­n ban, a bunch of us, about a thousand, went to the San Francisco airport to protest it, on a Monday.” — Mayor Lenny Siegel

 ??  ?? Lenny Siegel
Lenny Siegel
 ?? SHONDA RANSON – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Lenny Siegel, left, chairs his first meeting of the Mountain View City Council as mayor Tuesday. At right is council member Pat Showalter.
SHONDA RANSON – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Lenny Siegel, left, chairs his first meeting of the Mountain View City Council as mayor Tuesday. At right is council member Pat Showalter.

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