Hospital Prepares for Nurses Strike

Nurses at the Watsonville Community Hospital are preparing to walk off the job on Thursday for a 24-hour strike. They’ve been offered a bonus, but they say the problem is a shortage of staffing and the burden that this places on nurses, even with a pay hike. And, they say, the hospital has been unresponsive to their demands by failing to make alternative suggestions and only meeting with them six times over the past nine months. The strike is intended as a wakeup call to the hospital administrators at Community Healthy Systems, the country’s biggest publicly traded hospital network.

Continue Reading →

City About to Get New Beach for Free

Plenty of people frequent Sunny Cove Beach, a three-acre strip of waterfront at the end of 17th Avenue in Live Oak. They come for the sand, the bluffs, and the view—a panoramic outlook over Monterey Bay. What many of those visitors don’t know is that they are only able to go there because of the owners’ generosity. The beach is actually private land, he extended property of a home on one end.

Continue Reading →

Zipcars Come to Santa Cruz

Putting the zip in Santa Cruz.

The national car-sharing program Zipcar has expanded from UC Santa Cruz campus to cover all of Santa Cruz. Now anyone in Santa Cruz who registers for the program can take out one of six Zipcars for anywhere from an hour to four days. The cost of renting the cars is $8 per hour or $66 per day. The cars, which include three Prius hybrids, are parked in four lots, or pods, throughout the city.

Continue Reading →

Silko Heads for Santa Cruz

Leslie Marmon Silko appears at Bookshop Santa Cruz tonight.

In 1977, just a few months after the publication of her bestselling novel, Ceremony, Leslie Marmon Silko found herself alone in a hospital bed in New Mexico, face-to-face with her own mortality. She was about to undergo emergency surgery for a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, a procedure that was risky but without which she would certainly die. The possibility of death helped her, as the saying goes, to focus.

Continue Reading →

UCSC Names Its Streets

This move toward the mainstream we don't mind.

It’s easy to get lost on the UCSC campus. Roads meander along the contours of the hills, and often devolve into dirt paths, which may be great for hiking, but are hardly friendly to the underbelly of a car. “It’s more like finding your way around Yosemite than a campus,” says the school’s Director of Transportation Larry Pageler. For all the rest, it is like finding your way to Schrute Farm on The Office: “Turn left at the big tree, take 62 paces, and turn right. If you smell bear droppings you have gone too far.”

Continue Reading →

Man Shot Dead During Watsonville Robbery

The Fiesta Latino Market on East Beach Street at Beck is a popular spot in Watsonville, often frequented by students from Watsonville High School. On Tuesday night, an armed robber entered the store and demanded money. The owner, Yahya Ahmed, 32, gave him what he asked for, but before the robber left he shot Ahmed dead. Police are now investigating the crime, wondering if it is in any way connected with a shoplifting incident that took place at the 98Cent Discount Store on Freedom Boulevard on Monday.

Continue Reading →