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Santa Clara Puts Bond Money to Work

The City of Santa Clara approved $100 million of bond money projects, debated fiscal issues and rehired a former administrator.

The Santa Clara City Council has approved $100 million in city infrastructure projects.

Last year, voters approved $400 million in infrastructure bonds to help fund the city’s more-than-$600-million infrastructure needs. At its first meeting of the year, the council approved $100 million of that money to go toward 27 projects throughout the city.

Those projects are broken up into two categories: capital improvement projects and those designated nonprofit projects, such as improvements to the George Haines International Swim Center and the Triton Museum.

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Kenn Lee, the city’s finance director, said the debt services on the bonds is heavily weighted toward the first couple years, something he said was “always contemplated.”

But not everyone was convinced.

Council Member Kevin Park expressed skepticism about whether the bond issuance pencils.

“I think we approved a $400 million bond to cover a $600 million worth of infrastructure debt, and every year that work on something else, the cost of the stuff we’re not working on goes up,” he said.

The city received a AAA credit rating, the highest possible. 

There was minimal public input on the item.

Betsy Megas, a member of the city’s Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee speaking as a resident, implored the council to take a thoughtful approach.

“Keeping up with maintenance can be more economical than catching up with deferred maintenance,” she said.

A few consent items pulled for discussion prompted some council division. 

The first two dealt with travel expenses for council members attending conferences.

Changes to the policy came out of the Governance and Ethics Committee, which recommended changing some operational parameters on the policy. 

Council Member Kelly Cox originally pulled the item at a meeting in December, but, due to a long meeting, the council opted to delay the item. Cox did not attend the last meeting of 2025, so the items were again delayed.

Cox took issue with the lack of “guardrails” on the policy, saying it “doesn’t tighten responsibility.”

“If we go to the 10,000-foot level and look at what is going on with our public, and how we are perceived right now, this is a foolish thing to do,” she said. “This is a way we can tell the public, ‘We are going to hold you to a higher standard, but we are going to loosen ours.’”

Council Member Suds Jain, the chair of the Governance and Ethics Committee, pushed back, saying commissioners going to conferences is valuable to the city and that policy update brings it in line with “what happens in the marketplace.”

Mayor Lisa Gillmor joined Cox in dissenting.

“Every dollar we spend on questionable conference travel is a dollar we don’t spend on the people we represent,” she said.

The items passed in a 5-2 vote, with Gillmor and Cox dissenting.

In another consent item pulled. Gillmor took issue with what she saw as “money being floated to the general fund.”

Gillmor took umbrage with how costs for public safety have been billed to the city in light of the agreement between the city and the Bay Area Host Committee. Those agreements specify the city will not be on the hook for any costs associated with Super Bowl LX or the FIFA World Cup games to be held at Levi’s Stadium this year.

Consequently, Gillmor was flustered that some of the costs have yet to be reimbursed, despite being on the books for longer than the agreement suggests is appropriate.

However, City Manager Jovan Grogan told Gillmor that settling bills is often a slow-moving machine.

Amid Gillmor’s objections, the item passed. 

City Rehires Former Administrator 

Finally, the city also rehired its former assistant director of public works.

Although Dave Staub retired at the end of last year, city employees implored the council to bring him back on a temporary basis for the marquee events in 2026. 

The council unanimously approved waiving the 180-day waiting period to rehire a former city employee, reinstating Staub to help fill a gap for the upcoming events.

The council approved the following spending in one motion via the consent calendar:

The next regularly scheduled meeting is 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 27, in the Santa Clara City Council Chambers at City Hall, 1500 Warburton Ave. in Santa Clara.

Members of the public can participate in the Santa Clara City Council meetings on Zoom at https://santaclaraca.zoom.us/j/99706759306; Meeting ID: 997-0675-9306 or call 1 (669) 900-6833, via the City’s eComment (available during the meeting) or by email to PublicComment@santaclaraca.gov

Contact David Alexander at d.todd.alexander@gmail.com

Previous City Council Meetings:
Santa Clara Budget Surplus to Bolster Reserves
NFL to use Soccer Fields During Super Bowl 
Santa Clara Approves Work at Swim Center

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