San Jose is winding down a hot meals program that started during the COVID-19 pandemic, and homeless advocates worry people will go hungry.
San Jose residents aren't just paying more for gas—they'll soon pay more to take out the trash too.
Santa Clara County will have a new sheriff for the first time in 24 years in one of the key races in Tuesday's primary elections.
Santa Clara County residents are being asked to reduce water usage and local water authorities are offering incentives to help homeowners.
Valley Water has agreed to pay $8.25 million to the victims of a devastating 2017 flood in San Jose.
Commissioners added a condition that any bricks removed from the warehouse must be recovered, stored and protected.
Jon Gustafson is leading a major expansion of Sharks Ice and opening the South Bay’s newest ice arena.
The lack of affordable housing, systemic racism and weak safety nets continue to be the leading causes for Silicon Valley's homeless crisis.
The VTA community gathered to mourn workers killed in a mass shooting one year ago—and to find a path toward healing.
The city’s main animal shelter is understaffed and ill-equipped to take care of the growing number of kittens.
The lawsuit claims the organizations are responsible as they should had evicted the attacker for his known violent behavior.
One of San Jose's fundamental departments that drives the city's economy is filling job vacancies, but still has several open positions.
An affordable housing development near San Jose's Roosevelt Park will finally break ground after years of delay.
San Jose officials are holding a day of remembrance for the victims of the VTA mass shooting one year ago.
The rising cost of gas is impacting Santa Clara County nonprofits and threatening food for the homeless.
After years of delay, an affordable housing development near San Jose's Roosevelt Park is poised to finally break ground.
About two dozen people will likely end up back on the streets of San Jose.
San Jose moved up the ranks to become one of the Bay Area's two best places to live in the United States.
Bicycle safety is an ongoing challenge in the Bay Area, but San Jose is working to change that.
San Jose residents sleep soundly in train quiet zone.
A coalition of mall workers and San Jose State University college students are fighting to be heard at Westfield Valley Fair.
As of last week, 95% of California—including Santa Clara County—was in either severe or extreme drought conditions.
A legal obstacle that blocked new housing in North San Jose for almost a decade has now been removed.
PG&E reports that it is trying to restore power.
San Jose saw its homeless population grow 11% during the pandemic despite investments in housing and enhanced safety measures.
Rallies for reproductive rights took place nationwide Saturday, including in front of San Jose City Hall.
Some families in Santa Clara County are feeling the pressure.
For the first time in roughly two years, Google held an in-person community forum for San Jose residents.
Since last summer, San Jose has ramped up its effort to manage homeless encampments that have grown in size and visibility.
City officials said there’s an urgent need for new developments to only install drought-tolerant landscapes, citing extremely dry conditions
Grace Baptist Church is one of the few religious centers still standing from the early 1900s.
San Jose Housing Department spokesperson Jeff Scott said both warming centers served 242 people this season.
San Jose officials are asking the Federal Aviation Administration for more time to clear out the city's largest homeless camp.
“Black April” is a somber reminder of the more than 2 million people who died during and after the Vietnam War.
“My mom would have stayed alive if the county and the hospitals had helped her when she needed them.”
The council and community members agreed closing San Pedro Square to travel is the right move.
Friends of Levitt Pavilion San Jose can move forward with its long-time dream.
Some Santa Clara city employees plan to strike if negotiations toward a new labor contract continue to stall.
One San Jose nonprofit may have discovered a way to lower food insecurity and increase the culinary workforce simultaneously.
San Jose’s streets have become increasingly dangerous, with traffic fatalities three times higher than the number in March 2021.