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Bond Paves Way for Maintaining Critical Infrastructure in Santa Clara

The Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters certified the results of the November 5 election. This means Santa Clara voters passed Measure I, a general obligation bond that will fund greatly needed infrastructure projects in our city.

The $400M in bond proceeds will enhance the City’s efforts to address over $600M in unfunded infrastructure needs, such as aging fire stations, storm drain systems, and aquatic facilities. City staff have already identified projects within the Expenditure Plan and this bond will provide a path forward to making vital repairs and improvements throughout Santa Clara.

“We are incredibly grateful to the voters for recognizing the need to invest in our City and to maintain our roads, parks, and facilities that serve our community,” said Mayor Lisa Gillmor. “This is an essential step to preparing for our future.”

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Staff will begin work to prioritize the lists of proposed infrastructure projects within the Expenditure Plan for each project phase of the bond. The plan includes the following specific projects and estimated delivery costs. The project areas are:

  • Fire Stations and Emergency Response ($142,235,450)
  • Parks, Libraries, Senior Center, and Aquatics Facilities ($115,258,750)
  • Storm drain System Improvements ($46,000,000)
  • Police Facilities ($43,987,500)
  • Streets and Transportation ($41,170,000)
  • Historic Buildings and Beautification ($9,200,000)

In January, the City will be launching a recruitment campaign for members of the Citizens’ Oversight Committee, which will act as a body that ensures the funds are used responsibly. The recruitment will be posted to the City’s website. To sign up for updates on the recruitment process and to be added to our mailing list for future Citizens’ Oversight Committee meetings, visit SantaClaraCA.gov/eNews.

The process of issuing the bonds includes working with the City’s financial advisor to competitively procure an underwriter and bring the bonds to market. At that point, the City will have the initial bond proceeds to expend funds on the projects outlined. Due to the size of the bonding and the time to complete the design and construction documents, there will likely be two to three tranches of bond funding issuances over time. Shorter duration projects may be completed with the first bond issuance. Larger projects will likely require at least two years to design and receive environmental clearance, then building and construction could start.

“This bond will help bridge a major funding gap in maintaining critical infrastructure projects,” said City Manager Jovan Grogan. “We thank the public for the trust placed in us, and our top priority is providing high-level services and amenities to Santa Clara residents and businesses. This much-needed funding will enable the City to enhance our public facilities and provide reliable use for the community in the years to come.”

The Santa Clara City Council will officially ratify the results of the election at its regular council meeting on Dec. 17, 2024.

Related Posts:
Unfunded Infrastructure: Santa Clara’s Parks, Playgrounds and Pools
Unfunded Infrastructure: Streets, Storm Drains, Buildings
Santa Clara’s Aging Fire Stations Reaching End of the Road

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1 Comment
  1. CSC 2 days ago
    Reply

    Four of the six project categories are of good benefit to residents, the Fire Stations and Emergency Response at $142,235,450 and Police Facilities at $43,987,500 are not.
    .
    Facts About Santa Clara’s emergency services compared to Sunnyvale…
    • Santa Clara square miles 19.3, Sunnyvale 22.7
    • Santa Clara has 10 fire stations, Sunnyvale 6
    • Santa Clara has approximately 150 firefighters
    • Sunnyvale has 201 public safety (police+fire) officers
    .
    The parks, libraries, senior center, and aquatics facilities along with residences and businesses need more nimble response teams as apposed to slower, 30,000 lbs, firefighting apparatus. Four ambulance crews (2-person) with 8 qualified personnel can easily be on stand by at an “ambulance station” and at a much lower cost than fire trucks and firefighters. Once employee unions representing firefighters convince council members and residents on building more fire stations they then claim firefighters are faster due to their already strategic placement but what they’re really doing is controlling who gets to decide community services. The better way to serve residents in Santa Clara would be to convert at least two of the current fire stations into “ambulance stations” and expand contracts with the county. Here is a great article and audio podcast where a Bay Area fire chief details how firefighter unions plan take over county contracts, siphon federal dollars, and strong arm ambulance companies: https://reason.org/commentary/with-ems-takeover-attempts-californias-fire-departments-seek-more-taxpayer-funding-to-do-less.
    .
    And the “police facilities” are not a substation, SCPD is wants to construct a mini combat-town with your $44-million. Their excuse is to save driving to the south county facility that just about every other agency in Santa Clara County uses. Residents are about to be fleeced out of $44M so that bored SCPD cops can play warrior cop every month. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pan58y2EBbE
    .
    Hopefully the City Council still yields adequate influence over how this money is to be spent. Updating fire stations to code, sure. Updating fire stations with Lazy-Boy recliners, 60″ Smart TVs, gourmet barbecues and kitchens, and having a strangle hold on improving medical response times, not so much.

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