Calendar

9896
Nov
5
Tue
Occupy Forum: The Movement Action Plan: A Model for How Successful Movements Work @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor, near 16th St. BART
Nov 5 @ 2:00 am – 5:00 am
OccupyForum presents…

The Movement Action Plan:
A Model for How Successful Movements Work

with JoAnn McAllister

Even through grassroots activists and their social movements have been powerful and often successful throughout history, most activists believe they are powerless and feel their movement is ineffective and failing. These beliefs can become self-fulfilling prophesies that create a chain reaction of hopelessness, low energy, burnout, dropout, declining numbers, and disastrous strategies and tactics. Without a guiding framework that explains the step-by-step process of social movement success, activists are unable to set appropriate long- and short-term goals, develop appropriate strategies, tactics and campaigns; and avoid common pitfalls. The Movement Action Plan Model provides tools of analysis and action, and offers great hope to those working to change society.

JoAnn McAllister is the Director of the Human Science Degree Program at Saybrook University in San Francisco. JoAnn develops programs for community-based organizations, educational institutions, and government agencies, and participated in numerous social movements over the last 30 years. She is the co-author of Doing Democracy: The MAP Model of Social Movements, developed by non-violent activist and trainer Bill Moyer who began working for social change with the American Friends Service Committee in the 1960s and then as staff with Dr. Martin Luther King, and participated in or trained activists in almost every major social change initiative over the succeeding forty years.

Participants will be invited to begin analyzing the stages of the Occupy movement and the roles that citizens – activists, rebels, change agents, and reformers – are playing in bringing about systemic change.

Time will be allotted for Q&A, discussion and announcements. Donations to Occupy Forum to cover costs are encouraged; no one turned away!

53577
Million Mask March – San Francisco @ Civic Center
Nov 5 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Jailhouse for Gelhaus @ Old Court House Square
Nov 5 @ 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm

March to The District Attorney’s Office, 600 Administration Drive, Room 212 J Santa Rosa.

WE HAVE ONE DEMAND, for now. We demand Erick Gelhaus be immediately fired, arrested, and Indicted for the Murder of Andy Lopez. We will march to the District Attorney’s OFFICE on this coming Tuesday, the 5th, planning to leave downtown around 1:30. We need everyone that can be there, there. Justice cannot wait!

To all students: Do not let people attempt to quite your voice. It is your voice that is fueling this fight for Andy. It is your voice that has the power to lead to change. It is your voice that needs to be heard!!!

The District Attorney is the one that will decide if Gelhaus is to be arrested. For that reason, we must unite, and stand on the shoulders of “outside agitators” and take our message to the doorstep of the D.A., Jill Ravitch, “Jailhouse for Gelhaus !!!!”

Facebook event & RSVP.

Comment:

JOIN US IN SANTA ROSA ON TUESDAY NOV 5TH, AS WE FIGHT FOR JUSTICE FOR ANDY LOPEZ. HIS MURDERER STILL FREE ON THE STREETS AS ANDY’S FAMILY’S LIFE IS FOREVER SHATTERED BECAUSE ERICK GELHAUS DID NOT EVEN GIVE ANDY 10 SECONDS TO UNDERSTAND WHAT WAS HAPPENING BEFORE HE WAS MURDERED IN HIS OWN NEIGHBORHOOD.

WE DEMAND A MURDER INDICTMENT FOR ERICK GELHAUS!! THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY JILL RAVITCH IS FACING RE-ELECTION – MAKE SURE SHE UNDERSTANDS HER FAILURE TO PROSECUTE ERICK GELHAUS WILL BE THE END OF HER CAREER!!

53592
Nov
6
Wed
Special Oakland City Council Meeting to Consider Resolution in Support of Richmond’s Proposed Mortgage Relief Program using Eminent Domain. @ Oakland City Hall
Nov 6 @ 12:30 am – 1:30 am

From Inside Bay Area.

The Oakland City Council will soon consider whether to endorse Richmond’s strategy to use eminent domain as a tool to fight foreclosure and study whether it should do the same. The council will take up the issue at a 4:30 p.m. special meeting on Nov. 5 that was requested by Council members Desley Brooks, Larry Reid and Noel Gallo.

Richmond’s effort to do something constructive about mortgage relief for large numbers of homeowners in Richmond is being supported by Strike Debt Bay Area (Facebook and webpage) and ACCE.

For background check out this article by two Strike Debt Bay Area peeps, Can a Small California City Take on Wall Street—And Survive?.

Come and show your support for a city willing to take on Wall Street and demand that Oakland do the same.

53518
Town Hall Meeting: The Alameda Sheriff and District Attorney. Why Can’t We Do Better? @ South Berkeley Senior Center (just a few blocks from the Ashby Bart)
Nov 6 @ 3:00 am – 5:00 am

Representation for the People, a coalition of East Bay activists, is sponsoring this town hall meeting. The coalition opposes the policies and actions of Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley and Sheriff Greg Ahern. These elected officials continue to run unopposed yet espouse policies and views that progressives find unacceptable. The coalition is therefore organizing to explore ways of getting rid of our sheriff and district attorney.

Speakers:

  • Wilson Riles: Former Oakland Councilperson, speaking on the importance of electoral politics to a progressive agenda.
  • Dan Siegel: Civil Rights Attorney, speaking on the violations of civil rights that the current District Attorney and Sheriff routinely commit.
  • Brooke Anderson: Labor activist, arrested October 25th, 2011. Spent many hours in horrible conditions in the Santa Rita Jail (which the Sheriff is wholly responsible for)
  • Reverend Buford: Pastor at the Allan Temple Baptist Church.

The public will be invited to provide input. Please mark your calendar and bring a friend. The senior center is located near the Ashby Bart station.

 photo color-poster-townhall-n5_zps800dc9ca.png

 
 
Just a few things a new District Attorney could do:
– Investigations into wage theft, abuses by creditors, foreclosure fraud and environmental crimes.
– Voice support for improved crime labs, removal of police from schools
– Refusal of prosecution for drug possession or use.
– Voice opposition to curfews, arrests of school children, solitary confinement of children.
– Independent investigations of police misconduct.
– Keeping costs down by not keeping low level offenders in jail awaiting prosecution decisions

Just a few things a new Sheriff could do:
– No cooperation on ICE raids and no use of ICE holds.
– Abandon the pursuit of the acquisition of drones.
– Refusal to participate in homeowner evictions.
– Keeping costs down by using ‘cite and release’ to keep low-level offenders out of jail
– An independent, unbiased Coroner’s Office.

52981
Nov
7
Thu
Low-Wage Capitalism Bookgroup/Class. @ Workers World Offices, Oakland (ring buzzer for #411 to get in)
Nov 7 @ 2:30 am – 4:30 am

What the new globalized, high-tech imperialism means for the class struggle in the U.S.

http://www.lowwagecapitalism.com/

3rd in series of three classes – if you’d like a copy of the book to read in advance of the class, please message Terri Kay to work out getting a copy to you. We will cover section 3 of 3 this week. If you missed session 1 or 2, no worries, you’ll be able to follow the discussion with no problem.

Snacks will be served – wheelchair accessible

Facebook event & RSVP.

53626
Save the Berkeley Post Office! Pack the Meeting! @ North Berkeley Senior Center
Nov 7 @ 3:00 am – 5:00 am

Support the Zoning Overlay

WE MUST AGAIN PACK THE PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING

Zone for the Community, not the Developers
We need you to speak or be a supportive audience member.

SAVE THE BERKELEY POST OFFICE!

Over 75 people came to the last Planning Commission meeting–60 spoke FOR the Zoning Overlay and only 3 spoke for the developers. At this next meeting, the Commission will finalize its recommendation to the City Council.

WE MUST AGAIN BE THERE TO SPEAK FOR THE ZONING OVERLAY!

Berkeley’s Planning Commission and City Council propose to place a Zoning Overlay on Berkeley’s existing Historic District. This area includes Berkeley’s Old City Hall, New City Hall, Berkeley High School, Veteran’s Memorial Hall, and the Berkeley Main Post Office at 2000 Allston Way. The Zoning Overlay would limit the area’s use to community, cultural, and civic purposes. It will make the Post Office less vulnerable to developers and help the USPS realize the value that Berkeley places on its public services.

Berkeley’s historic Civic Center District is our Public Commons. Let’s protect it with appropriate zoning. Although the uses of buildings change, the end result must be a stronger community, not a richer real-estate developer. Let us show that we are a city of caring citizens in community.

Save the Berkeley Post Office Facebook.

Berkeley Post Office Defenders Meets Mondays on the Steps of the Downtown Berkeley Post Office.

53562
What’s That Stench??? Rude Crude Threatens our Bay!!! @ Berkeley Ecology Center
Nov 7 @ 3:00 am – 5:00 am

As we step up a concerted transition to alternative energy, Big Oil lurches towards its last gasp: exponential development of fossil fuel infrastructure at West Coast ports for transport, storage, refining and shipping to Asian markets.

The WesPac Pittsburg Energy Infrastructure Project would transform Pittsburg (a dormant industrial, residential area in our Northern San Francisco Bay) into a major crude oil receiving, storage and shipping facility. WesPac develops, constructs, owns and operates infrastructure throughout North America for petroleum products handling, and Pittsburg is the next target for modernization and reactivation of its existing marine terminal and oil storage and transfer systems.

Plans are to move Canadian tar sands crude to the Chevron and Shell refineries through pipelines and extended rail systems, load it onto ships and send it to Asia to the tune of 242,000 barrels per day. This is the same dirty crude slated for the Keystone XL pipeline, a project drawing widespread opposition. Even dirtier crude oil would be shipped to the WesPac facility from southern California. Oil would also come from a huge deposit in North Dakota, which, like the California oil, would be extracted by fracking.

This development will include:

— Pipelines: Expand existing pipelines and add new lines from rail cars to tanks;
— New Rail: Build crude-by-rail transload facility; extend tracks, greatly increase rail shipments thru town;
— Storage: Modernize and reactivate the site’s tanks and build new ones;
— Tanker trucks, diesel trucks: Mobilize for construction and transport: (congestion, diesel fumes, road deterioration, traffic hazards);
— Shipping: Dredge and pile drive to deepen the Bay and reopen, expand and modernize Marine Terminal

Spills, leaks, blow-ups, smog, gas, fires (like the one in Richmond), soil contamination, prolonged effects on area air and water quality and health effects such as asthma, birth defects, and cancer, loom. Increased pollution from idling trucks, rail cars and ships — affecting wildlife, marshes and wetlands, the shoreline, polluted water in the delta (water used for drinking and agriculture), and decreased property values — will result. Pittsburg will become a fossil fuel backwater, and critically, greenhouse gas emissions, warming the climate, and threatening the integrity of our global ecosystem, jeopardize us all. Do we want the Bay Area to be the locus of this scheme to expand fossil fuel extraction and use? Do we want the health of Pittsburg and North Bay residents to be undermined by these environmental threats? And can we stand by as life on our planet is under attack?

Stand with Pittsburg and the Bay Area to Say “NO” to

Expansion of Fossil Fuel Infrastructure on our Bay

Come to the Berkeley Ecology Center to meet the groups forming to fight this and get involved in the upcoming actions and campaigns. We’ll hear the background and plan the backlash.

Coalition to fight massive tar sands export from our Bay: Pittsburg Defense Council, Idle No More, Baykeeper, Communities for a Better Environment, 350Bay Area, National Resource Defense Council, Sierra Club, Groups from North Bay refinery towns, OccupySF Environmental Justice, Forest Ethics, Richmond Progressive Alliance, Refinery Action Collaborative, Sunflower Alliance, No Tar Sands, Steelworkers, Occupy Action Council, and more joining every minute!!!

53601
Save CCSF Press Conference @ Steps of the Science Building
Nov 7 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Come to the
.
SAVE CCSF PRESS CONFERENCE

We have raised the entire amount for both the legal campaign and the DOE campaign! YEAH!!
(See below for more information about these.)

OTHER SAVE CCSF NEWS & UPDATES

LEGAL CAMPAIGN
Our attorney Dan Siegel (working for us pro-bono) is going forward with a legal strategy developed in consultation with AFT 2121’s attorney as well as the SF City Attorney’s office. It is complementary to existing lawsuits against the ACCJC. It will be filed this week. Look out for announcement on our website this week for details.

DOE CAMPAIGN
We are working to ensure that the ACCJC’s authority is not renewed by the Department of Education this December when they are up for their 5-year renewal. Our campaign made it possible for over 50 Third Party Comments to be sent to the DOE asking them not to renew ACCJC authority. Our next step in this campaign is to send a delegation from CCSF to Washington, D.C. to give oral comments at the hearing on December 12th. We expect to have an array of forces aligned on the other side who have much more money and resources than we do.

53603
Twitter Day of Action: Rally With Community Speakers. @ Twitter Headquarters
Nov 7 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm

Today is Twitter’s IPO.

Facebook event.

There are things that do not get tweeted: neighborhoods are being transformed and not for the benefit of the majority of San Franciscans. Average rents for a one bedroom apartment in the city have eclipsed $3,000 and long term residents—many of whom are seniors and people with disabilities—are very vulnerable to eviction via the Ellis Act by landlords who want to cash in on much of the tech money flooding the city.

With Twitter alone, the City is losing about $56 million of revenue dollars (doubled to what the City projected in 2011). This does NOT include SF tax payers actual spending on the Twitter new express bus route, the 83X, which was added by the MTA and the increase police foot traffic around their building. Twitter was also exempted from the ballot initiative that requires businesses be taxed on their total gross receipts rather than payroll. With widespread evictions, vital social services that are underfunded, or in a constant threat of being cut, and the crisis at City College of San Francisco and the transportation needs of the city including increase fares to existing San Franciscans — the community at large asks Twitter and the other tech companies: What is your public offering to the people of San Francisco?

Sponsored by: Senior and Disability Action, South of Market Community Action Network (SOMCAN), Jobs With Justice, Bill Sorro Housing Program, POOR Magazine/Prensa POBRE, Gray Panthers, Manilatown Heritage Foundation, SEIU-United Service Workers West, Housing Rights Committee SF, SF residents and many more!

53852
Nov
8
Fri
Twitter Day of Action: Speakout at Citizen’s Advisory Committee Meeting. @ City Hall, Room 416
Nov 8 @ 1:45 am – 3:00 am

Today was Twitter’s IPO.

Facebook Event, More Info & RSVP.

SPEAK OUT at the Central Market/TL Citizen’s Advisory Committee Meeting. We demand REAL community benefits agreements!

53853
Nov
9
Sat
HARD TIME: Film Showing & Discussion.
Nov 9 @ 3:00 am – 5:30 am

Speakers: Robert King of the Angola 7. Azadeh Zahrabi of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children.

“Hard Times” is a film about Robert King, the first freed member of the Angola 7. King spent 29 years in solitary in Louisiana.

Sponsored by the ANSWER coalition.

52972
POSTPONED: Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition Meeting. @ Postponed
Nov 9 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

In light of other actions this day in Oakland and in Santa Rosa for Andy Lopez, the monthly Justice 4 Alan Blueford Coalition meeting has been postponed for a week.

Hope to see you all next week!

53864
National Day of Action. Oakland Stands with Andy Lopez. @ Fruitvale Bart Station Plaza
Nov 9 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Rally – Speak Out – March

Nationwide outrage has swept across the nation in the wake of the brutal murder of 13 year-old Andy Lopez by Santa Rosa Sheriff Erik Gelhaus.

The worst thing we can do now is go home. Keep the pressure on!

Stand with us as we stand against terror in our communities because:

– Playing with toys is NOT a crime.
– Walking while Brown or Black is NOT a crime.
– Living our lives is NOT a crime.

Fire Prosecute and Jail Erick Gelhaus.

Sponsoring Organizations:
ONYX Organizing Committee, Justice for Alan Blueford (JAB), ANSWER, Oscar Grant Foundation

Facebook event & RSVP.

53602
National Day of Protest for Andy Lopez: Santa Rosa @ Julliard Park
Nov 9 @ 9:00 pm – Nov 10 @ 1:00 am

There will be protests, in Andy’s name, as a collaboration with countless organizations around the nation, with groups protesting in their own respective cities…

Facebook page, more info & RSVP.

Come Tell Your Story.

Guest Speakers & Open Mic. Music, Snacks, Information Tables.

53851
Boston School Bus 5 – National Day of Solidarity. Demonstrate Against Veolia
Nov 9 @ 11:00 pm – Nov 10 @ 12:00 am

Say NO to Veolia/City Union Busting!

Hands off the Boston School Bus Union 5
– Vice President Steven Gillis (fired 11/1/13),
– Grievance Chair and Local founder Stevan Kirschbaum (fired 11/1/13),
– Recording Secretary and Charlestown Chief Steward Andre Francois,
– Steward and Local founder Richard Lynch and Steward
– 3 term former President Garry Murchison.
The latter three suspended and threatened with firing.

Every day, USW Local 8751 members in Boston are experiencing more and increasing disrespect from Veolia management, including constant suspensions and threats based on bogus allegations and constant harassment. This includes an illegal lockout that occurred on October 8 that was substantiated and witnessed by local union officials and community leaders, which followed a constitutionally protected free speech protest and discussion by the workers of Veolia’s contract violations and disrespect.

eolia is an international conglomerate that has an extensive history of union busting, and relentless attacks on communities of color. Veolia is an International Tea Party patriot with links to the Koch brothers and the 1%. Their crimes of greed are worldwide, from the profits garnered from running segregated buses and a “settlers only” garbage dump in Israeli occupied Palestine.

Facebook page, More info & RSVP.

53625
Nov
10
Sun
Talk by Dr. Joy DeGruy: Establishing Unity in the African-American Family @ North Berkeley Senior Center
Nov 10 @ 12:30 am – 2:00 am

A unique opportunity to attend a free talk by Dr. Joy DeGruy, author of Posttraumatic Slave Syndrome: America’s Legacy of Injury and Healing.

This is a FREE event.

Facebook event and RSVP.

Dr. Joy DeGruy holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication, a master’s degree in Social Work (MSW), a master’s degree in Clinical Psychology, and a Ph.D. in Social Work Research. Dr. Joy DeGruy is a nationally and internationally renowned researcher, educator, author and presenter. She is an Assistant Professor at Portland State University and the President of JDP Inc. Dr. DeGruy has over twenty-five years of practical experience as a professional in the field of social work. She conducts workshops and trainings in the areas of mental health, social justice and culture specific social service model development.

More about Dr. DeGruy

53570
Foreclosure Defense Group Meeting @ by the statues
Nov 10 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

Our weekly open meeting for members and supporters to discuss the weeks tasks and projects. Come get plugged into ongoing housing defense work! We have abundant and varied work for all folks in any number of meaningful projects.

Rain location: SF Pizza, 1500 Broadway, Oakland

46745
Occupy Oakland Foreclosure Defense Group Meeting @ 19th & Telegraph, in the park by the statues
Nov 10 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

Our weekly open meeting for members and supporters to discuss the week’s tasks and projects. Come get plugged into ongoing housing defense work! We have abundant and varied work for all folks in any number of meaningful projects.

Rain location: SF Pizza, 1500 Broadway, Oakland

50026
Transport Workers Solidarity Forum: The Bay Area Battle in Transport: Workers Face Employer Onslaught – No More Defeats Like Wisconsin! Business Unionism vs. Class Struggle Unionism @ Black Repertory Theater
Nov 10 @ 10:00 pm

***PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF VENUE BELOW!

The Bay Area Battle in Transport: Workers Face Employer Onslaught

 

No More Defeats Like Wisconsin!


Business Unionism vs.

Class Struggle Unionism

 

Meeting:
November 10 (Sunday) 2:00 PM
At: Black Repertory Theater
3201 Adeline Street, Berkeley

 

One ATU

 

Although BART workers marched through downtown Oakland in August and October chanting “Strike, strike, strike!”, union officials shackled them with a concessionary contract.

Why did BART workers settle for a concessionary contract after fighting for four months — striking twice, staging militant mass rallies in downtown Oakland, and inspiring AC Transit bus drivers and mechanics to twice vote down concessionary contracts — each time overwhelmingly?

Why did BART workers vote so resoundingly to approve the concessionary contract (more than 85% of those voting voted “Yes”)? Was this the best they could do? How could they have won a better contract?

Why didn’t BART union leaders mobilize the rank and file (for example, through democratically elected strike committees?) Why wasn’t there a joint strike committee of the BART unions (ATU 1555, SEIU 1021, and AFSCME 3993) and the AC Transit union (ATU 192)? Why did ATU 192 president Yvonne Williams denounce a joint strike of AC Transit workers and BART workers as “Armageddon”?

Why did BART and AC Transit union officials put their faith in Democratic politicians rather than reaching out aggressively to labor and the community? Why did ATU 1555 leaders call on Jerry Brown to invoke a 60-day cooling-off period to suspend the right to strike? How can we defend the right to strike for transit workers, when Democratic state politicians are drafting legislation to make such strikes illegal?

Why did ILWU officials turn their backs on their union’s militant history and direct their members to cross a picket line of port truckers and community supporters? How can ILWU members reclaim the solidarity their union badly needs. Longshoremen are locked out at two northwest ports. Scabs are doing their work. And negotiations for the ILWU’s master contract for all West Coast ports is just around the bend.

Has the labor movement lost its class struggle moorings? In its heyday unions fought for the unemployed and underemployed, for immigrant workers and youth, against racism and home foreclosures. What can be done to ignite such struggle today, forge real solidarity, and beat the bosses’ barrage of union busting?

Come hear speakers involved in these worker struggles:

 

George Figueroa– Strike Coordinator of the successful July BART strike for ATULocal 1555*, now being victimized by BART.

Clarence Thomas– Co-Chair of the Million Worker March, Executive Board member of ILWU 10*

A Member ATU Local 192* (AC Transit worker)

Yemane Seium, Frank Adams– Organziers, Oakland Port Truckers’ Association*

Jack Heyman– Chair of TWSC and an organizer of the 1984 longshore anti-apartheid ship boycott, the May Day 2008 anti-war West Coast port shutdown and the 2010 Bay Area ports protest for justice for Oscar Grant

(*for identification purposes only)

This forum is organized by the Transport Workers Solidarity Comittee (www.transportworkers.org)

 

 

 

53700