The Mercury News

San Jose voters should re-elect Mayor Liccardo

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Sam Liccardo has done a superb job in his first term as mayor, resolving San Jose’s decadelong pension battle, positionin­g the city to bring Google to San Jose and raising the minimum wage for low-income workers.

It’s that sort of leadership that makes him one of the star mayors in California. Voters should reward Liccardo on June 5 by voting to give him another four years in office.

Liccardo’s biggest accomplish­ment was sitting down with the police union and reaching a compromise on their challengin­g pension issues. The successful effort enables San Jose to rebuild its depleted police department. The April graduation of 47 new officers from the San Jose Police Department’s academy best symbolizes the progress. After years of staffing turmoil, the city is within about 75 officers of meeting the 1,109 authorized positions.

It’s just one example of Liccardo’s inclusive, solution-oriented approach as mayor.

The effort to bring Google to San Jose requires a deft touch, given the potential impact of 20,000 workers on downtown. If successful, it would transform San Jose’s downtown core and help solve the city’s jobs-housing imbalance. Liccardo has also worked to attract smaller businesses — think tech firms such as Zoom, SuperMicro and Splunk — which may not be household names today but are the type of companies crucial to sustaining San Jose’s growth.

Liccardo is also far and away the best choice for voters wanting to see San Jose become more livable and solve its affordable housing and homeless crisis. High constructi­on costs will make that a challenge, but his work with Santa Clara County Supervisor Dave Cortese and Destinatio­n: Home on providing housing for nearly 700 veterans is the type of cooperativ­e effort that offers hope for the future.

The mayor in 2015 called for a regional approach to raising the minimum wage for low-income workers. That resulted in San Jose, Palo Alto, Cupertino, Milpitas, Morgan Hill and Monte Sereno agreeing to a $15-perhour minimum wage that will be implemente­d in 2019.

None of Liccardo’s three challenger­s on the ballot merit serious considerat­ion.

Steve Brown, who ran an unsuccessf­ul campaign for the District 2 seat on the City Council in 2016, did not respond to requests for an editorial board interview and has not mounted any kind of campaign. Neither has Tyrone Wade, a retired counselor with no previous experience in public office.

Quangminh Pham, a 72-yearold Vietnamese refugee, came to the United States in 1975. He is a retired small business owner who is making housing the focus of his campaign. But his notion of crafting an ordinance to allow homeowners a free hand to expand their homes willy-nilly to create more rental units is a non-starter. So is his proposal to give long-term renters living in San Jose an advantage over non-residents when trying to buy a home.

When we recommende­d Liccardo to voters in 2014, we said “he was by far the most thoughtful, creative and capable of lifting the city beyond its fiscal limitation­s to thrive as the urban heart of Silicon Valley.”

Nothing has changed to alter that thinking. San Jose voters should re-elect Mayor Liccardo.

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