Before the City finalizes any of these four decisions — or any other decision — residents should ask the City Council two questions and expect honest answers, discussed openly in public meetings and put on the record:
The Ethics Question: Why, if at all, is this decision the right thing to do for the people of Santa Clara?
The Public Trust Question: How, if at all, will this decision build the public's trust that their government puts the people's best interests above all others?
These are the core questions of ethical decision-making. Decision-makers can ask them at every stage. They take only a few minutes to answer honestly — and the answers reveal everything about whose interests a decision serves.
Residents should expect — and insist on — clear, complete, and honest answers. No vague assurances. No scripted responses. No partial truths.
When residents consistently ask these questions in public meetings, in writing, and through neighbors talking to one another, decision-makers come to understand that the public is holding them accountable to those standards. Over time, the questions stop being something residents have to ask. They become part of how decision-makers deliberate before they vote.
There's a useful test for evaluating any answer the City gives. Ask: would a reasonable person, looking at all the facts available, find this explanation believable on its own? Or do other plausible reasons also explain the decision — reasons the official answer leaves out because the public would find them unacceptable, petty, or beneath the dignity of local government?
Political retribution may be tolerated at the federal level. Personal grudges, donor obligations, and score-settling may be ordinary in Washington. Local government holds itself to a different standard — and residents have every right to expect that standard. When the public explanation isn't believable on its own, the unspoken reasons usually stay unspoken for a reason. They wouldn't survive being said aloud at a Council meeting where the neighbors are listening.
When you encounter that gap — between the explanation given and what would actually be believable — bring it to the Public Trust Partners Forum. The community there will share what it knows, what it documents, and what it suspects. Some of what you'll hear is fact. Some is informed speculation. Some is conspiracy theory. The Forum is where residents work out, together, which is which.
These four decisions are already in motion. The public moments to speak come and go — the City usually schedules them late, after Council and staff have already shaped the substantive choices. Timing matters.
Speak at a Council or Stadium Authority meeting. You can comment two ways at every meeting: two minutes to speak on an agenda item and three minutes during public comment on any topic under the Council's jurisdiction. Three minutes is enough to ask one question, name one fact, or hold one person accountable. Meetings happen most Tuesdays. Agendas are available 72 hours in advance on the City's website (santaclaraca.gov) or you can sign up to have them emailed to you.
Write to the Mayor and Council. Email mayorandcouncil@santaclaraca.gov. Tell them you want them to ask the two questions, discuss them openly in public meetings, and answer them on the record before they finalize any of these decisions — or any decision where public trust is at stake.
Join Public Trust Partners. A verified community of Santa Clara residents working together on these decisions. Members use a PEN name — an anonymous identifier that lets you speak freely without risking retaliation. Go to the Engage page in the top menu.
Tell your neighbors. Most Santa Clara residents don't know these four decisions are underway. Send them to PublicTrustNow.com. A short text, a forwarded link, a mention over the fence — that's how the audience for this work grows, and growing the audience is how the City Council finds out the public is paying attention.
There is no time to lose.
(Note: As these decisions progress, we will post relevant articles at the bottom of each of the decision descriptions above. Check the News page for the latest stories. We will post on Tuesdays and Fridays by 9 a.m.)