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Mountain View poised to roll out RV ban this month, prohibiting oversized vehicles on most city streets

News Mountain View poised to roll out RV ban this month, prohibiting oversized vehicles on most city streets Uploaded: Tue, Jul 6, 2021, 1:37 pm 4 Time to read: about 3 minutes RVs will soon be prohibited from parking on Crisanto Avenue, where dozens of homeless residents have found shelter in large vehicles. Photo by Sammy Dallal. In the coming weeks, Mountain View will begin the long task of installing close to 2,600 no parking signs across the majority of the city s streets, banning RVs and oversized vehicles from parking along public roadways. City officials say the undertaking is expected to begin in early or mid-July, delivering on a voter-approved measure to prohibit large vehicles from parking on 444 of the city s 525 streets. Though the measure was ostensibly about traffic safety, advocates on both sides openly acknowledged Measure C as a means to reduce the growing number of homeless people living in vehicles.

Voter-approved MV ordinance restricts parking of oversized vehicles

The implementation of a voter-approved Mountain View ordinance that restricts parking of oversized vehicles on narrow streets will soon be underway. Measure C bans the parking of oversized vehicles, including boats, large trucks and RVs, to address traffic safety concerns on streets that are 40 feet wide or less. A total of 444 streets in Mountain View qualify as narrow. Although Measure C passed by nearly 57% in the November 2020 election, enforcement of the Narrow Streets parking ordinance could only begin when “No Parking” signs were installed. Over the past several months, Public Works Department staff have overseen the procurement and manufacturing of the signs, as well as engineering to determine sign placement.

Longtime Mountain View teacher Jonathan Pharazyn dies at 66

Uploaded: Thu, Apr 29, 2021, 1:51 pm Jonathan Pharazyn, a former Mountain View teacher and school administrator known for championing the needs of underserved students, died in a bicycle accident earlier this month. He was 66. Pharazyn began working in Mountain View Whisman schools in 2000 as an assistant principal at Graham Middle School and capped off his 35-year career in education as a teacher at Monta Loma Elementary until 2016. Characterized by his upbeat persona and social justice streak, Pharazyn stayed active in schools as a substitute teacher into retirement. Born in San Francisco as an only child, Pharazyn spent his youth living in both San Carlos and Honolulu, eventually moving to the East Bay where he graduated from Pittsburg High School. He attended Reed College in Portland and the University of California at Berkeley before taking a hiatus from the Bay Area to attend school in Illinois.

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