Martinez, CA|News|
When Safety And Convenience Collide
The train crossing at Ferry Street can be incredibly annoying, and deadly.

Jim's first experience out of high school was two-fold – playing guitar in John Lee Hooker's band, and leading his own five-piece band, Colefeat. His first "day job" was as a copy boy at the Oakland Tribune in the mid and late 1970s, the last days of the old-school newspaper men and women. Cigarettes, coffee and alcohol were the fuels that drove those newsrooms, along with an unmitigated love of the business, and the integrity of the people's right to know.
In the 1980s, Jim was a reporter for the Martinez News Gazette, the Oakland Tribune, and other publications. After a brief stint at the Antioch Daily Ledger, Jim returned to the city of Martinez as public information officer, deputy city clerk, and assistant city manager. He went on to work in corporate communications for the Bayer Corp. and Kaiser Permanente before launching Martinez Patch.
My Beliefs: I believe that government needs everyone's participation to work correctly. I believe it is the media's job to inspire and inform that participation. I believe everyone has a fascinating story to tell. I believe that shouting your opinions makes you less likely to be understood. I believe that music is essential to happiness, and that auto-tune is detrimental to music. I believe that my responsibility as a journalist in your community is a sacred trust, one that I will do everything in my power to live up to and fulfill.
Politics: I am a social liberal, and a fiscal moderate. I believe the worst thing to happen in politics lately is the entrenched, dogmatic "us vs. them" attitude inspired by and fed by cable TV talking heads. The key to political success: listening.
Religion: I am a practicing Buddhist.
Local Hot-Button Issues: Should downtown strive for constant growth and renewal, or should it maintain a small-town feel? This seems to be the overriding question in terms of development. The balance between spending on cultural enhancement vs. police and public safety services also seems constantly at odds.
The train crossing at Ferry Street can be incredibly annoying, and deadly.

Third annual event drew uninsured and underinsured from various shelters in the area for free eye care.
The following information was taken from the Daily Police Log and rewritten by Martinez Patch.
Technology is asking me to remember far too many secret passwords before it grants me access to its joys and wonders.
The information here is taken from the Daily Police Log and is rewritten by Martinez Patch.
Singer will leave behind a brief but brilliant legacy, and a warning to those who see addiction as romantic.
Here is your Tuesday morning list of the least expensive gas in Martinez.
Aug. 6 event will feature information booths, live music and lots of beaver-ful activities.
Elle Masters needs another year of chemotherapy, and her family needs help with the bills.
The following information was taken from the daily Police Log and rewritten by Martinez Patch.
I need to be moved, vigorously and with intent, which means aches and pains in my very near future.
City officials celebrated the opening of the $5.8 million Rankin Aquatic Center on Thursday, replacing the old pool that was built for $800,000 in 1948.
These are the movies Martinez people are renting from Red Box this week.
Department restructuring will help further the goals of the neighborhood policing program, police chief says.
The digital revolution has brought music out of the stadium and back into your home town.
The following information was taken from the Daily Police Log and rewritten by Martinez Patch.