
"Sunnyvale is considering transportation improvements at the intersection of Bernardo and Brookfield avenues, as well as along Bernardo Avenue from Blair Avenue to Parkington Avenue. Residents can weigh in on their choice for a roadway solution at http://bit.ly/4nWKhk5. The survey deadline is Nov. 3. The city is asking users of Sunnyvale's Water Pollution Control Plant Treatment Ponds Interior Levee trails for feedback on how they use these trails and how potential closures might impact them."
"Sunnyvale is in the process of changing its Tenant Protections Program so that landlords must provide increased relocation assistance for tenants evicted without fault, and this assistance will increase from two to three months of rent. Landlords are asked to take a survey at http://bit.ly/3Jp7tZd. A survey for tenants is at http://bit.ly/3KZtQVD. Surveys are available in English, Spanish, Tagalog and Simplified Chinese. Deadline is Nov. 15."
"Yet another survey asks Sunnyvale community members for their thoughts on a future 5.5-mile East Channel Trail. Most of the trail would follow Valley Water's East Channel by utilizing the existing maintenance road. It would connect the San Francisco Bay Trail in the north to Ortega Park in the south, then continue on city streets to reach Homestead Road. In some areas where the channel goes underground, the trail may need to use local streets."
Sunnyvale requests community input through several surveys on transportation and trail projects, pond-levee trail usage, and tenant protections. Planned transportation work includes improvements at Bernardo and Brookfield avenues and along Bernardo Avenue from Blair to Parkington, with a survey and a Nov. 3 deadline. Users of the Water Pollution Control Plant Treatment Ponds Interior Levee trails are asked about trail uses and impacts from potential closures. Tenant Protections changes would raise relocation assistance for no-fault evictions from two to three months; landlord and tenant surveys are available in four languages with a Nov. 15 deadline. A proposed 5.5-mile East Channel Trail is in phase two, seeking route and crossing input.
Read at The Mercury News
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