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There’s something spooky growing again on Church Drive in South San Jose.

Bob Schiro’s house — which for 10 months of the year looks like all the others on the suburban block — has slowly been transformed into a haunted forest, complete with a wicked looking tree growing out of a cavernous witch’s den. There are crypts and spider webs and scary monsters lurking in the corners, all ready to give a good-natured fright to Halloween visitors.

“I like the challenge of creating something new,” said Schiro, who previously has turned his house into a ghostly pirate ship, a haunted mansion and a ghoulish version of the Hotel De Anza. “We’re not just creating the same thing every time. It motivates me.”

Schiro and his “Boo Crew” of about a dozen people have been working on the new idea since August. The fabrication is like a Hollywood-style set, with a lot of attention to details. The house will be open to visitors on Wednesday and Thursday, from 4:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. each day, with the first 90 minutes reserved for non-scary visits tours. But after 6 p.m., you’d better be ready to jump.

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The Halloween extravaganza, which draws around 5,000 people over the two days, has become an annual tradition on Church Drive for more than a decade. Schiro’s display not only takes over his driveway and front yard but creeps into his neighbors on each side, who get into the spirit along with everyone else. And it’s helpful that there’s aren’t houses across the street — just the parking lot for Church of the Chimes, which fills up with onlookers during Halloween.

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San Jose landmark project down to these three choices It’s free to visit, but a donation to Second Harvest Food Bank is requested. Last year, even with rain, seven barrels of nonperishable canned goods were donated.

FOX HONORED FOR A DECADE OF GOODWILL: San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo stopped by Goodwill Silicon Valley’s board meeting last week with a commendation from the entire city council to recognize Michael E. Fox, Jr.‘s 10th anniversary as CEO of the local nonprofit.

In Fox’s decade at the helm, the organization has grown from serving 4,000 people each year to nearly 18,000 people a year. In those numbers are 700 veterans who have found employment through Goodwill and 474 homeless veterans who have had their housing facilitated by the organization.

COUNTY LIBRARIAN HONORED FOR SPEAKING UP: In 2017, the grant qualifications to receive state funding began requiring English as a Second Language program participants to provide Social Security information. Santa Clara County Librarian Nancy Howe decided to decline the funding for the sake of her patrons’ privacy.

That decision is being cheered next month as the California Library Association honors Howe with the Zoia Horn Intellectual Freedom Award at its Nov. 10 awards gala in Santa Clara.

“By providing access and resources for all, regardless of their background, Nancy has ensured that our libraries remain some of the most welcoming places within our county,” said Santa Clara County Supervisor Mike Wasserman, who was re-elected last week as chair of the Santa Clara County Library District’s Joint Powers Authority Board.