Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Why I Live Here: I bought my Aptos house for $100K in 1981. Friends tell me I’m lucky; I don’t agree.

Claudia Sternbach landed in Santa Cruz County by chance in 1981, when she and her husband, Michael, were idealists searching for a way to make a life close to the water. Today, their Aptos home is worth 10 times what they paid, but people she has known for decades are leaving, unable to afford the soaring home prices. Her daughter can’t afford to live here. She wonders aloud what Santa Cruz is becoming and what will happen to adventure-seeking young people today.

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Letter to the editor: Crimes against humanity: County sent 40 people from temporary housing at Oceana Inn on Friday

Have something to say? Lookout welcomes letters to the editor, within our policies, from readers. Guidelines here. To the editor: My senior citizen friends were sent to sleep on the streets in a tent handed to them by Santa Cruz County workers. We have been trying to get them housing for months and we have […]

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Santa Cruz wages are so low, some of us live in our cars; city workers need raises, protection and respect

Santa Cruz’s 600 union workers — the people who collect the city’s garbage, test water, maintain parks and roads — are fed up with what they see as low wages and disrespect from public officials. Five months into bargaining with the city, they write, the talks are going nowhere. They want higher salaries, more on-the-job safety, and more respect. They say they are paid 15.3% less than average long-term workers and 8.7% less than in nearby cities. As a result, some Santa Cruz city workers are living in cars, maxing out credit and camping in the very parks they maintain.

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

One Friday in the new, post-Roe America: How losing abortion access changes us all

Soon, the Santa Cruz area’s Planned Parenthood’s offices will see 250 to 500 more patients per week, out-of-state refugees pushed west by Friday’s Supreme Court decision to reverse Roe v. Wade. But those are only the ones who have the money and connections to get to us. Jessica Dieseldorff, a nurse practitioner at Planned Parenthood Mar Monte in Watsonville, writes about our new reality, both for those coming to California and for those of us here.

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Letter to the editor: Give us more to think about, and more of Faith Brown

Have something to say? Lookout welcomes letters to the editor, within our policies, from readers. Guidelines here. To the editor: Faith Brown’s article (and others like hers) are hard because they force us to look inward and acknowledge deep truths. But alongside those feelings, I felt enlightened with a deeper sense of understanding. Can we […]

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Motiv nightclub needs to change dress code; Santa Cruz ‘isn’t noticing or calling out its own latent racism’

Motiv nightclub in downtown Santa Cruz has a dress code that prohibits visible tattoos, “gang-affiliated” colors, excessively baggy clothes, sandals and flip-flops. UC Santa Cruz student and Black Lives Matter activist Faith Brown writes that the policy is an “invitation to racism.” Motiv refused to talk to Brown, but told Lookout its dress code is not regularly enforced.

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Letter to the editor: Renovated Simpkins pool is not accessible for many

Have something to say? Lookout welcomes letters to the editor, within our policies, from readers. Guidelines here. The pool at Simpkins Family Swim Center recently reopened after months of renovation, but now there is no longer a portable lift available for people with physical limitations to use for the large pool. There is a stationary […]

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

‘I had to hurt my body’ to get around campus: UCSC should improve access for people with disabilities

Amanda Quirk wants UC Santa Cruz to improve its access for students with disabilities. She spent five years as a Ph.D. student in astronomy and astrophysics and struggled to navigate the campus’ hills, rocky paths and roads without sidewalks. The university and city, she says, need to do better. Already, too many talented students choose to go elsewhere.

Posted inOpinion from Community Voices

Letter to the editor: Hooray for Safeway’s choice to carry cage-free Glaum eggs

Have something to say? Lookout welcomes letters to the editor, within our policies, from readers. Guidelines here. To the editor: Many of us were pleased to hear that a number of local Safeways will now carry cage-free eggs from Glaum Egg Ranch. In recent years, hundreds of major companies — such as Panda Express, Outback […]

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