The City of Hollister marked a milestone with cake and entertainment Saturday at the Veterans Memorial Building.
βThe 40th anniversary of the recreation department is an amazing accomplishment,β Hollister City Councilman Jim Gillio told a crowd of locals and parks department staff β past and present β at the celebratory gala.
Recreation supervisor Tina Garza explained the extent of the departmentβs involvement in the city as she stood before a display of more than 2,000 photos of activities taken over the last four decades.
βWe provide a lot of services, adult and youth sports, and special events like Breakfast with Santa. We do a lot of summertime events like the Junior Giants program, which is free,β she said.
As Gillio cut the anniversary cake, a white frosted confection topped with a giant ornament in the shape of the number 40, he highlighted the role volunteers play in supporting department programs.
βWe just had a gentleman onstage, Jim Hart, who was honored for his service even though heβs no longer a city employee. He goes above and beyond to come out and help the community. Thatβs amazing,β he said.
Hart was given a volunteer distinguished service award.
βHe takes pictures, assists us with what we need and helps us find volunteers,β said Special Events Coordinator Jennifer Rodriguez. βWithout his help, a lot of our projects and programs wouldnβt be able to exist. We rely on our community and volunteers to help pull everything together.β
Later in the evening, a second distinguished service award was presented to Marietta De La Cruz, the longest serving instructor in the department.
De La Cruz, 49, first got involved with Hollister recreation programs when she was 12 years old. After attending University of California, Davis and four years of active duty in the military, De La Cruz returned to Hollister and began teaching martial arts.
βI came back and took over the karate school,β De La Cruz said. βThey were going to shut it down because there was some turmoil going on, but Iβve kept it alive since 1999 and itβs going strong.β
De La Cruz said she likes that classes are kept affordable.
βA lot of karate schools charge a lot and not everyone can do it,β she said. βMy parents were farmers and we couldnβt afford the expensive stuff and the programs were affordable for me. We just love to have kids learn to defend themselves and become confident people.β
The free, anniversary event featured local entertainment by the San Benito Dance Academy, Barnes Academy of Irish Dancing, Sammyβs Animation Dance Community, Yamamoto Ohana Hula, singer/songwriter Kya Andrade and country singer Martin Pulido.
Contributors included The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), Ohana Shaved Ice, Dinoβs Hot Diggity Dogs, MANA food vendors and Safeway bakery.