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Spartan Daily Vol. 161 No. 17

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NAMED BEST CAMPUS NEWSPAPER IN CALIFORNIA FOR 2022 BY THE CALIFORNIA COLLEGE MEDIA ASSOCIATION AND CALIFORNIA NEWS PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION

Thursday,

Volume 161 No. 17

September 28, 2023 WWW.SJSUNEWS.COM/SPARTAN_DAILY

SERVING SAN JOSÉ STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1934

MATTHEW GONZALEZ | SPARTAN DAILY

Students gather outside of San José State University's James F. Boccardo Business Education Center building after evacuation because of a fire on Wednesday morning.

Restroom catches fire on campus By Matthew Gonzalez EXECUTIVE EDITOR

A fire on the third floor of the Boccardo Business Center left San José State students scrambling on Wednesday morning. Elaine Lê, academic adviser and building marshal for the business tower, said the fire broke out in the women’s rest ro om somewhere between 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. “When I spoke with students, they had told me they just sat down for their class when the

alarm went off,” Lê said. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined. Accounting senior Michael Stephenson said there was a great sense of urgency when fellow students in his class, located on the third floor, heard the alarm. “Everybody jumped because the alarm, but people were just like ‘Yeah, alright,’ ’’ St e p h e n s on said. “People got up, and grabbed their stuff really quick.” Similarly, business marketing senior, Anabel

Cuevas said the expression on her professor’s face was the catalyst for a scary realization. “The professor is giving a lecture and out of nowhere he looks startled, and I realized there was a loud noise,” Cuevas said. “Yeah it [the fire alarm] caught me off guard for like a second, and then everybody just started walking out.” Cuevas said she and her classmates in groundlevel classroom 022 were some of the first people to be evacuated from the building.

“It was mainly our class [outside] at first, and the class next to us,” Cuevas said. “And then slowly the crowd started coming because everybody was coming down the stairs.” Lê, who was working in the Student Success Center on the first floor of the business tower said her immediate reaction was to clear out any occupants of the building. She said when she got to the third floor, the hallways were relatively unscathed, but conditions in the women’s restroom were worse.

“I went to the third floor, the highest floor and was going to evacuate any folks in the (women’s) restroom and there was a lot of smoke and it was hot,” Lê said. Lê said when she went to evacuate the women’s restroom, the stalls in front of her weren’t visible, having been engulfed in smoke. She said the experience was jarring. Aaron Klemm, senior director for energy, utilities and sustainability at SJSU said while the San José Fire Department contained the flames,

health and safety standards in regards to air quality are a secondary, but equally important threat. “When the fire department had determined there was no longer an active fire threat, that doesn’t mean it’s fully safe to occupy [the business tower] to our health and safety standards,” Klemm said.

Follow Matthew on X (formerly Twitter) @matthewgnzlez

VTA discusses future transportation projects

By Brandon Nicolas SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) hosted a community outreach open house event to promote the Valley Transportation Plan 2050 (VTP 2050) at the Roosevelt Community Center Wednesday evening. VTA provides sustainable transportation options including bus, light rail and paratransit services throughout the greater Santa Clara Valley County, according to its website. The VTP 2050 is the countywide transportation plan and policy framework for developing future transportation projects, according to its website overview. Adopted after VTP 2040, the plan identifies existing and future highways, local streets and roads, transit and bicycles, each with dedicated programs aiming to better and expand transportation for the community, according to the same source. VTP 2040 is a part of VTA’s Bart Silicon Valley Phase II, the largest single public infrastructure project ever constructed in Santa Clara County, according to its website. Estimated to carry 55,000 passengers each weekday, the Phase II will include the construction of BART stations at 28th Street/Little Portugal Station, Downtown San José Station, Diridon Station and

Santa Clara Station, according to the same site. Set to be completed by 2040, students, faculty and staff would be able to take BART transit from Santa Clara Station into Downtown. There is also a projected connection to Berryessa/ North San José Station. The VTA open house featured several tables each decorated with information posters about specific programs under VTP 2050. Attendees at the event were encouraged to participate in providing feedback by talking to VTA staff and participating in active surveys. Senior Transportation Planner John Sighamony spoke at the event supported by a presentation about the plan. VTP 2050, proposed in Nov. of last year, started with public input to determine county goals for the next 25 years, Sighamony said. He also said the plan is currently in the development phase until Feb. of next year and is set to be fully adopted by summer. “We’ll then develop the document beginning in the spring,” Sighamony said. “That takes into account whole strategies, projects and what we need to be doing to make those projects happen.” Sighamony said the open house is a great opportunity to gather input from community members whose voices are not

generally heard. Data Scientist Mirae Lee said she takes public transportation bi-weekly for recreational purposes. She said she was curious to know what long term plans of VTP 2050 were and stopped to chat with VTA staff. “I take the bus to get to events, grocery stores . . . really just to get around the city,” Lee said. She said her household is in the process of becoming less dependent on driving as a means of transportation and referred to walking or biking as good alternatives. “In general, I just wanted to learn more about what plans there were to decrease commute times,” Lee said. Sighamony said the VTA Visionary Network plan aims to reduce wait times when using light rail or bus and increase ridership. “A lot of our major routes are 15 minutes,” he said. “If we get it down to 10 minutes, people will be more like, ‘Okay I can wait ten minutes and the bus will be there.’ ” Sighamony said in addition to the shorter wait time, bus station restoration and transit speed will be monitored. VTA would have to work with the city to adjust transit and bus signal priority. “It’s like the biggest bang for your buck, you know, and some of these projects are important

BRANDON NICOLAS | SPARTAN DAILY

Attendees listen to a speaker at the VTA event on Wednesday.

projects, but some of them are very expensive,” he said. “This is something that our riders could use.” Associate Principal Woody Hanson works for SITELAB urban studio, an urban design firm working with VTA to produce a community rich environment surrounding 28th Street/Little Portugal Station. He said the upcoming BART stations will implement transit-oriented development, an active and dense development plan set to surround the stations. “The goal is to bring people to the station, and when they arrive at the station, they know exactly where they are,” Hanson said. Hanson said it’s important for 28th Street/Little Portugal

Station to represent its neighborhood because it’s not a downtown station. Hanson greeted attendees and gave them colored stickers to place on different panels representing what they want to see built in their community. “It’s a transit oriented development that’s rooted in the character of the neighborhood, so community engagement is really important,” he said. “With this neighborhood, we need to better understand what it needs, what stories it’s telling and how we can imbed that in future development.” Follow the Spartan Daily on X (formerly Twitter) @SpartanDaily


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