Cambrian Resident

VTA razes site of mass shooting

Six of the nine victims were killed in Building B at the light rail yard in San Jose one year ago

- By Eliyahu Kamisher ekamisher@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Nearly a year ago, Building B on the western edge of Guadalupe rail yard transforme­d from an anonymous off-white structure to the site of the Bay Area's deadliest mass shooting. Since that early spring morning on May 26, the Valley Transporta­tion Authority building has remained shuttered and its windows darkened in one of the most visible symbols of the tragedy that shook the region and continues to upend the lives of survivors.

On May 11, the building met wrecking crews.

Constructi­on workers caved in the roof, gutted the interior and have virtually destroyed the structure that for some traumatize­d workers looms over the rail yard like a black mark.

Among them is John Courtney, president of the VTA's largest union. Courtney was in the break room when a disgruntle­d VTA maintenanc­e worker pulled a gun from his duffel bag and opened fire. Inside Building B, Courtney huddled on the ground behind a flimsy plastic chair before yelling at the gunman to “stop f—ing shooting.” His demand went unheeded, but Courtney was spared.

The structure still hangs over Courtney's frequent visits to the rail depot. After returning to work as a full-time union president, Courtney once fell to his knees in front of the building and called for help. He has wanted the structure demolished for months but now acknowledg­es that his journey past May 26 is far from over.

“You feel like there are some loose ends that you need to tie

up in your mind so you can move on,” said Courtney. “The fact of the matter is you can't tie up all the loose ends.”

The nine shooting victims were fathers, brothers and husbands.

They left behind children who are now preparing for college, a wife considerin­g moving out of state, and friends who have put together a memorial golf tournament. Another veteran VTA employee

who witnessed the attack later took his own life.

But as the VTA approaches that tragic day's one-year anniversar­y, there are still unresolved matters. In November, victims' families filed claims for damages in excess of $140 million, according to documents obtained through a public records request. The claims could go to trial if the parties do not reach a settlement.

Another $1.9 million contract that was supposed to be awarded to Deloitte to revamp a workplace culture criticized as toxic is delayed after divisions among the union leadership. Meanwhile, the VTA is enforcing a strict vaccine mandate that could see dozens of employees fired.

On May 11, excavators, surrounded by heaps of twisted metal, hauled piles of rubble into a dump truck where the building once stood. The structure, which housed the Way Power and Signal division, was already on the VTA's radar for renovation before the shooting, but the tragedy sped up the demolition.

In a matter of minutes, the gunman, Samuel Cassidy, killed six of his co-workers in the break room. He then moved eastward to Building A and killed three more before killing himself. There are no plans to destroy Building A, which houses the dispatch center and is far more difficult to replace.

Building B is not the only mass shooting site to be destroyed. Communitie­s around the country have grappled with how best to memorializ­e victims and move forward when buildings are often a constant reminder of the tragedy. Demolition crews leveled Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticu­t, where a shooter killed 20 children and six adults, and also a community college building in Oregon, where nine were slain.

“Many people early on wanted not just this building demolished, but they wanted the whole yard redone,” said Cindy Chavez, a VTA board member and Santa Clara County supervisor.

“I think the path to recovery is very long,” Chavez said. “This wound is so deep, that the recovery is more ephemeral. It's less physical in many respects.”

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Heavy machinery demolishes Building B at the Valley Transporta­tion Authority Light Rail maintenanc­e facility in San Jose on May 11. Six shooting victims were killed in Building B and three others from Building A by a coworker on May 26, 2021.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Heavy machinery demolishes Building B at the Valley Transporta­tion Authority Light Rail maintenanc­e facility in San Jose on May 11. Six shooting victims were killed in Building B and three others from Building A by a coworker on May 26, 2021.
 ?? ?? Heavy machinery demolishes the Building B at the Valley Transporta­tion Authority Light Rail maintenanc­e facility in San Jose on May 11.
Heavy machinery demolishes the Building B at the Valley Transporta­tion Authority Light Rail maintenanc­e facility in San Jose on May 11.

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