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Hollister
March 21, 2026

Spellbound achievers push to bee their best

Students from San Benito County gathered at Ladd Lane Elementary School on Tuesday to take part in the preliminary competition of the 17th annual San Benito County Spelling Bee. The grade school competition featured fourth, fifth and sixth graders.

Southside School District forgoes vote to appoint trustee

Southside School District’s Superintendent Eric Johnson swore in a trustee to a vacant board position, but minutes from board meetings show no votes leading up to the appointment decision.

Judge sides with developer in rejecting fees

A judge Monday ruled against the county and in favor of a developer that challenged the justification of an “annexation fee” charged to builders since the turn of the century.

Alejo requests parole denial for Hollister murderer Marlow

Assemblyman Luis Alejo sent a letter to the state requesting a denial of parole for Gustavo Marlow, who murdered two Hollister residents in the late 1980s and raped a Stockton prison laundry worker three years later.

County board OKs funds to fight Marlow release

County supervisors Tuesday agreed to allocate $25,000 to the San Benito County District Attorney's Office to prepare for the parole hearing of local murderer Gustavo Marlow.

Hollister officials share goals with budget in limbo

Hollister council members Monday took on a goal of devising goals. And by the end of the special gathering, city officials set another goal to come back at the next regular meeting with more goals.

FFA students receive highest honor

The highest degree that can be bestowed upon a FFA member is receiving the California State FFA degree. On January 21, 19 members from Hollister FFA received that honor, according to an announcement from the local Future Farmers of America chapter.

Relay for Life kickoff can show locals how to sign up

Hollister’s Relay for Life event is in its 18th year and is set to host a kickoff gathering next week to inform residents on all they need to know for team sign-ups and other details.

Council agenda item on ‘Goals’ falls short of state mandates

One of two agenda items on a special Hollister City Council meeting scheduled for Monday evening is listed as “Goals and Objectives” and could lead officials down a flimsy legal path if they choose to discuss specific topics.

Paint in the park

Community members are invited to gather with their own paint and canvas to create art on the grassy 400 block of San Benito Street, near The Vault and the Briggs Building this weekend.

The artists will be working from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday Feb. 7. The idea for the project was born when Phillip Orabuena, one of the lead artists of the new country-themed mural on San Benito Street, saw poems projected onto the wall of The Vault recently.

“We were talking there with some people from the city about the use of the grass area and the development they want to do to it,” Orabuena said. “And I just found out that pretty much anyone can utilize it but it didn’t seem that way at first.”

The paint party will also mark the arrival of a few new additions to the green space including a donated picnic bench, chalkboard and lending library.

“The thing behind this project is ‘Look how much change we can do if we all work together, pool resources together. And it doesn’t have to cost a lot,” said Rolan Resendiz, 36, who is helping prepare the chalkboard for the grassy area. “That’s going to be ‘placemaking.’ You take something, give it a facelift and make use of it in a positive way.”

The nonprofit Project for Public Spaces defines a “placemaking” project as when community members take a hands-on approach to improving their neighborhood, city or region, according to their website.

The community chalkboard—created by Poet Rachelle Escamilla, Muralist Joel Esqueda and his boyfriend, Resendiz—will arrive Saturday, Resendiz said.  So far, Escamilla has funded the chalkboard project out-of-pocket, though the receipts have been saved in case a donor comes forward, he said. The Friends of the Library donated $75 to help fill the library, Resendiz said.

The picnic bench is being donated by Casey Jahsman, the founder of Project Possible, a business that sells reclaimed wood furniture and uses the profits to “make the world a better place,” according to its website.

“There’s a lot of people at this point,” Resendiz said. “It just adds up and it takes off.”

Orabuena has reached out to fellow artists about the Sunday painting event with postings on social media and Craigslist.com.

“Come out and just paint. Enjoy outside painting. It’s a way of doing outside art without worrying about, ‘Do we have permission to paint this wall?’ ” he said. “There’s no law against just going to the park and painting on your canvas.”

Orabuena hopes the number of people attending will continue to grow, much like it did with a community bicycle ride he started three to four years ago, he said. Originally, the summer Tuesday evening rides had just 15 people, but the group grew to almost 300 people, he said.

“The way I went about starting that is the same way that I’m going about this, but with painting,” the artist said.

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