The Mercury News

Volunteers, city groups provide damage control

- Bal Aizarro

Downtown San Jose was a mess Saturday morning, the first day after what would be several nights of protests stemming from the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. But the resolute spirit of the community was also on full display that morning, as people showed up to repair some of the physical damage left behind.

Groundwerx, the cleanup crew funded by downtown business owners, was on the scene early along with city workers who painted over graffiti tags. But soon residents from surroundin­g neighborho­ods showed up to sweep up glass and rubber bullets, to help business owners put boards up over broken windows and scrub tags off the walls of buildings, including Horace Mann Elementary School at the corner of Sixth and Santa Clara streets.

There were individual­s and families with kids, nonprofit leaders and elected officials. Some heard the call for help on social media channels, others just stopped by and asked if they could lend a hand.

Some had participat­ed in the protests during the prior afternoon and evening.

By Monday morning, Beautify San Jose — a city program — started handing out cleanup kits including reflective vests and litter pick-up tools to volunteers from under a pop

up tent at City Hall. They were out again Tuesday morning and plan to return this morning at 10.

A GoFundMe campaign, working with the San Jose Downtown Associatio­n and arts collective Local Color, has been launched to help eateries and retail outlets, already hurting economical­ly because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, repair damage and cover insurance deductible­s. It had raised more than $8,000 by Tuesday afternoon. Small businesses, including Mezcal restaurant, arcade bar Miniboss and dessert stop Cinnaholic, suffered damage downtown, but owners reacted with understand­ing and empathy instead of resentment.

3Below Theatres, where two windows were broken and a nearby trash can was lit on fire, posted a message on Facebook grateful that no one was injured: “Our hearts remain broken for George Floyd and his family. We hope the demonstrat­ions throughout our country result in some positive change.”

It is encouragin­g that we can come together in community, whether it’s for a protest or a cleanup the next day. The actions of looters taking advantage of the situation should not take the focus away from the reasons protesters are demonstrat­ing across the county.

Anger has been building in San Jose for decades over issues and incidents that most of the city’s residents have never had to face. This week’s clean-up efforts will not erase or hide those problems, nor should they. At Horace Mann School, the scrubbed tags have left scars all over the building that may be there for years. And scars are memories of pain and, we hope, healing.

STEP UP FOR A CAUSE >> The coronaviru­s pandemic and accompanyi­ng shelter-in-place orders continue to affect nonprofit fundraisin­g events. The Stroke Awareness Foundation postponed its ninth annual Fight Stroke Walk from its original May 3 date to an undetermin­ed date this fall but encouraged supporters to walk as much as they could for their health.

Two other organizati­ons, though, have turned their events into virtual walks taking place over the next few weeks. The Huntington’s Disease Society of America has its San Jose Virtual Team Hope Walk/Run planned for June 20 to raise money to fight the inherited neurologic­al disorder. You can register at http:// pacificreg.hdsa.org and then walk however — and wherever — you’d like.

And the YWCA of Silicon Valley’s Walk A Mile in Her Shoes event is also going virtual. You might recall this is the event where hundreds of guys from around the valley walk around Santana Row in high heels to raise awareness about sexual assault and raise money to fight it.

Heels aren’t required for this year’s version, which will take place over a 56-hour span June 2325, which acknowledg­es that a sexual assault happens in California every 56 minutes. Sign up to participat­e atywca-sv.org/ walk-a-mile-in-her-shoes.

 ?? PHOTOS: ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Ulysses Renteria, left, Rob Seim and Katie, who did not give her last name, help parents and grandparen­t of students at Horace Mann Elementary School clean off graffiti along Santa Clara Street a day after the school was vandalized during protests in San Jose.
PHOTOS: ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Ulysses Renteria, left, Rob Seim and Katie, who did not give her last name, help parents and grandparen­t of students at Horace Mann Elementary School clean off graffiti along Santa Clara Street a day after the school was vandalized during protests in San Jose.
 ??  ?? Passerby Mallory Bidena stops to help after seeing volunteers cleaning graffiti off the walls Saturday at the school. Volunteers have been a big part of the restoratio­n efforts all over the city.
Passerby Mallory Bidena stops to help after seeing volunteers cleaning graffiti off the walls Saturday at the school. Volunteers have been a big part of the restoratio­n efforts all over the city.
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 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo speaks with Axel Chavez, 10, a fourth grader at Horace Mann Elementary School after joining a group of volunteers cleaning graffiti off the school.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo speaks with Axel Chavez, 10, a fourth grader at Horace Mann Elementary School after joining a group of volunteers cleaning graffiti off the school.

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