Mountain View
LATEST NEWS
ACE train hits, kills person on tracks in Newark
A person was struck and killed by an Altamont Corridor Express (ACE) train in Newark earlier this week, according to the San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission. At about 9:15 a.m. Tuesday, Newark officers and the Alameda County Fire Department responded to a fatal train collision near the 6000 block of Baine Avenue. First responders discovered a stopped ACE train and a person with severe injuries. The person succumbed to their injuries and died at the scene. No injuries were reported among the passengers on the train. The case is under investigation by the Union Pacific Police Department, which has jurisdiction over the trackway.
Major injury crash blocks Mission Boulevard in Fremont; traffic impacted on I-880
A crash involving major injuries shut down a main roadway in Fremont Thursday morning and was also impacting traffic on Interstate Highway 880, authorities said.The crash happened on eastbound Mission Boulevard near Warm Springs Boulevard at about 7:30 a.m. Fremont police said in a community alert that clearing the crash would take about four hours.There were no immediate details on the number of injuries or the circumstances of the crash.Eastbound traffic on Mission Boulevard was backed up to the northbound Interstate Highway 880 offramp. The California Highway Patrol said both the northbound and southbound I-880 offramps to Mission Boulevard/State Route 262 were closed because of the crash investigation.Police urged people to avoid the area. This is a breaking news update. More information to be added as available.
San Jose veterans home operator dumped over poor conditions
Formerly homeless veterans living in poor conditions at a San Jose complex hope things get better with the change in nonprofit service providers. The property at 10. Kirk Ave. is home to dozens of veterans that have lived with black mildew, fire hazards and unsafe electrical systems, among other problems — issues that have been going on for years. Santa Clara County purchased it last year and promised to turn it around. Homeless Veterans Emergency Housing Facility, a nonprofit led by CEO Irvin Goodwin, provided case management and meals to veterans at the site, but the veterans lived in squalor. Two months ago the Veterans Administration, which had been been funding a majority of the programs, said it would not renew its contract with the nonprofit, and the contract expired on Monday.
San Jose Expands Tiny Home Site to Tackle Homelessness Crisis, Doubling Capacity
In a bold move to address homelessness in South San Jose, the city is set to more than double the capacity of its Rue Ferrari tiny home site. By next year, 107 new units will be added, bringing the total to 270 beds, making Rue Ferrari the largest tiny home site in San Jose. This expansion, designed to help individuals transition from homelessness to stable, permanent housing, is a significant step in the city’s fight against the ongoing crisis.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.