Calendar

9896
Apr
19
Mon
Refund, Restore, & Reimagine: Oakland Faith Community Panel @ Online
Apr 19 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
  • Online Event

    https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdR7f6H3U2m9iFkCDMlucjAAkNONOQhpeh4xBO7h6f-sOO_kw/viewform
***Note: Please click the link above to register. Thank you!*** We extend an invitation to people of faith and congregations in Oakland from the Faith Alliance for a Moral Economy and the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity.

The recent wave of anti AAPI violence and the ongoing impacts of policing and the COVID pandemic on Oakland communities give us reason to consider what it would look like to refund local communities, restore dignity, and reimagine public safety. Many communities and congregants are struggling to pay their rent; fear eviction and are living in distress. The most vulnerable of Oakland residents — low-wage workers, undocumented, immigrants, refugees, Latinx and Black community members — are disproportionately suffering from COVID and the economic impacts of the pandemic.

We want Oakland to be a safe and welcoming place for all its residents where there are enough resources to support everyone to thrive, so that our communities are living in solidarity and not pitted against each other.

Join us for a timely conversation about how the Oakland city budget can support this vision, strengthen families and communities, and address root causes. We will hear from pastors of impacted Oakland communities and progressive council members, Council President Nikki Fortunato Bas (D2) and Carroll Fife (D3) as they talk about reimagining community safety and a just recovery.

Co-hosted by:

** The Faith Alliance for A Moral Economy (FAME), mobilizes faith leaders and their communities to act in solidarity with low wage workers, particularly communities of color and immigrants, through interfaith dialogue, policy advocacy, and public actions via Economic Justice for Black Oakland, and we are an initiative of the East Bay Alliance for A Sustainable Economy (EBASE).

** The Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity (IM4HI), mobilize congregations to take a stand on issues of social justice like immigration and mass incarceration, and engage people of faith to develop their own leadership so they can stand up against racism, discrimination and the political challenges of our time.

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Film Premiere: Occupy the Farm @ Online / On Television
Apr 19 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Many of us will remember the heroic struggle to save the Gill Tract Farm in Albany, when 200 urban farmers walked onto a publicly-owned research farm and planted two acres of crops in order to save the land from becoming a real estate development.  Occupy The Farm, a documentary films about this struggle, will have its broadcast premiere on Sonoma and San Mateo PBS affiliates for Earth Day.  You can see the trailer here, and the whole film at these locations:
______________________________________________________________________________________

KRCB (Sonoma).  April 20,   7-9 PM   90 min film, followed by 30 minute panel discussion
Over-The-Air 22.1
Comcast 22
Comcast South Bay 200
Comcast HD 722, 1022
Direct TV / ATT Uverse 22
Dish 22

KPJK (San Mateo).  April 22,   8-10 PM   90 min film, followed by 30 minute panel discussion
Over-The-Air channel 60.
Comcast 17
Comcast HD 717, 1060
Direct TV / ATT Uverse 43
Dish 60

KQED viewers should be able to pick up KRCB and KPJK with no difficulty.  You can also stream KRCB on its website if you are viewing in its demographic area.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

Occupy the Farm follows a community’s struggle to preserve public land for urban farming.  The Gill Family transferred their farm to UC Berkeley in 1929, believing that it would always remain a farm.  But by the 21st century only a fraction of it remained open growing fields.  The film captures an intense conflict over the fate of the last remaining 20 acres of farmable land in the urban East Bay, when community members employed an ingenious and audacious strategy to confront a powerful institution that had ignored them.

When the 200 community members marched to the gates of this farm, they did not carry signs protesting the University of California’s plans to turn this research farm into a shopping mall.  Instead, they carried tents, tools and 15,000 seedlings.  They cut the padlocks off the gate, marched onto the land and planted two acres of crops.  What happened next changed the destiny of the land and presented a hopeful new strategy for activists.  From preparing the soil, to police raids, from lawsuits to overflowing harvests, Occupy the Farm reveals a resourceful community facing off against a powerful institution to provide access to healthy food and protection for public lands.

Following the film, a roundtable discussion will update the work on the farm during the pandemic, discuss new threats to this contested land, and reflect on what the pandemic, and climate change mean for the future of urban agriculture.  Participants include: Effie Rawlings, UC Gill Tract Community Farm member, and OCCUPY THE FARM organizer; Ashoka Finley, an OCCUPY THE FARM organizer and urban farmer who works in technology, and is now part of a start up in San Francisco; Will Smith, of Black Earth Farmers, who took the responsibility to manage farming operations just prior to Covid-19, and throughout the pandemic led farming, and food distribution for the Gill Tract; Charisma Acey, Associate Professor of City and Regional Planning in the College of Environmental Design, and Faculty Director of the Berkeley Food Institute, who looks at the potential for urban farming amid increased pressures on the available land; and Todd Darling, the film’s director/producer.

 

Update: The Farm Today (2021)

The occupation transformed from an occupation to an actual farm.  Organizers who had once been arrested for trespassing now have keys to the front gate.  Slightly more than one acre of land at the Gill Tract became the UC Gill Tract Community Farm.  Volunteers from the community work alongside researchers from UC College of Natural Resources, and have created a research farm that operates a weekly farm stand, distributes food to East Bay organizations, and studies how best to create resilient, urban agriculture.

During the pandemic, the need for resilient, urban farming became painfully obvious.  Tens of thousands of families in the Bay Area became food insecure.  Food banks were stretched to their limit as a result of Covid-19.  This one-acre farm was able to supply food to 70 East Bay families a week, at no charge, even with delays and the complications of developing COVID 19 protocols.  With the arrival of Spring, the farm is now busy planting crops, preparing for a productive 2021. Revolving crews of volunteers arrive to work the farm and are led by Farm Educators.

Now, however, the Gill Tract land faces a new dilemma.  UC Berkeley says they need housing for an expanded student population.  Land that currently contains the farm’s barns and offices, and that once housed numerous greenhouses, has been targeted by the University for a large, six or seven story dormitory.  Intended for graduate students, the dormitory would be built by a Texas company, American Campus Communities, which specializes in “the privatization process.”  The company would build the dorm on the Gill Tract and then own and operate it.  This new dormitory will shrink the growing lands as the existing facilities would have to be moved onto the remaining fields.  According to preliminary plans, the dormitory will provide no classrooms or space for the farm, nor offer any educational linkage to this farm.  Additionally, the University’s ten-year commitment to operate the UC Gill Tract Community Farm will soon expire.  According to UC Capital Strategies, the UC Regents still have to approve the plans and the contract with American Campus Communities.  The test of whether these public resources are for research for the public good, or will be “privatized,” is once again on the table.

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Apr
20
Tue
Introduction to the Green New Deal @ Online
Apr 20 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm


Grandmothers for a Green New Deal,
a small group of elder women (members of 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations), invite you to a 90-minute, interactive zoom workshop to examine the Green New Deal as a blueprint toward a sustainable future.

PLEASE NOTE:

Each presentation is limited to 12 participants so everyone has a chance to share their ideas.  Please register early!

The workshop is centered around a 17 minute video, http://www.vimeo.com/grandmothers4aGND/APathForward.

Please watch the video before the workshop.

The video addresses the question:  What is the Green New Deal and why does it matter?  It reviews the basics of the threat of climate catastrophe, the need for a radical restructuring of society for racial, gender, and economic justice, and why these things are inseparably connected.  All in the voices of grandmothers talking about why this matters to them.

 

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You’ve submitted your request for public records, now what?
Apr 20 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Event banner page 2-page-002

You’ve submitted your request for public records, now what?

This training will cover what happens after you’ve drafted and submitted your California Public Records Act request.

Topics include;

  • Agency deadlines
  • Agencies fees
  • Practical tips for when an agency doesn’t produce what you’d like
  • CPRA lawsuits basics
Training conducted by Abenicio Cisneros (Follow on Twitter @CPRAlawyer).
The NLG-SFBA is organizing this training with two main goals in mind:
1) Per the request of movement partners as well as NLG projects and committees, and
2) To train up law students, new lawyers and lawyers interested in becoming more involved in movement lawyering in PRA submissions, follow-up and lawsuits to secure the information requested when withheld.
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Public Bank of the East Bay @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Apr 20 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

We meet over Zoom. If you’d like to join us, and aren’t on our organizers’ list, drop us an email and we’ll send you an invitation.

If you would like to join the meeting early and get an introduction to the concepts of public banking, or more locally to who we are and what we do, please email us and we’ll see you online at 6:30.

Donate to keep us moving forward

It is the mission of Public Bank East Bay to provide community oversight and stewardship in the formation and functioning of the Public Bank of the East Bay to base its decisions on the values of:

Equity

PBEB is committed to a public bank which acknowledges and attempts restitution of the  historical burdens carried by disenfranchised communities, including  communities of color and many other marginalized groups.

Social Responsibility

Decisions regarding who gets loans, what projects get invested in, and who benefits should take into account investing our money into the wealth and health of local communities and the environment.

Accountability

The bank is accountable to the  residents of the East Bay, who have a right to fully transparent explanations of  the Bank’s actions and choices.

Democracy

The bank will be governed using  democratic processes which consciously and intentionally adhere to the values/principles listed above.

JOIN A WORKING GROUP!

We have five committees working together to create a Public Bank in the East Bay:

  • Advocacy builds relationships with community groups and city governments.

  • Communications assists other committees with content creation and promotion.

  • Fundraising develops our organization’s budget and raises funds for our business plan.

  • Membership brings on new members and volunteers and organizes educational events.

  • Governance is responsible for operations and the execution of PBEB’s business plan.

Email us with your interests and we’ll help you find a way to get plugged in!

JOIN THE ALLIANCE

The California Public Banking Alliance (CPBA) is an organization of 12 member regions, not of individuals. You can join the CPBA mailing list (link at the Alliance website) to receive updates on state and sometimes national progress, which we will also include on this site.

68142
Fight to Protect Rent Control in Alameda @ Online
Apr 20 @ 7:30 pm – 11:00 pm

Register here
Alameda Renters Coalition needs help from social and housing justice allies to fight against this plan to change the CIP formula. It will lead to many evictions of renters who have already suffered through the Covid19 Pandemic Shelter-In-Place.

This benefits the largest corporate landlords.

City Council will consider revisions to the current rent control law that allow for a new Capital Improvement Plan (CIP). ARC has been fighting this plan since it was brought to our attention back in the summer of 2020. We have had numerous meeting with city staff, city councilmembers, and even realtor representatives, but the plan persists.

The proposed Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) plan will allow a landlord to pass-through 100% of the cost of a capital improvement (repair or replacement) that cost at least $25,000,or $2,500 for one unit, TO THE TENANT in addition to the annual allowed rent increase. The proposal would cap the pass-through at 5% per year and allow it to be amortized over at least 15 years and maybe more.

68954
Apr
21
Wed
WHO CARES?  A CONVERSATION ON FEMINIST CLIMATE ACTION @ Online
Apr 21 @ 10:30 am – 12:00 pm

REGISTER HERE.

After registering you will receive a confirmation email with information on how to join.

Women’s Earth Alliance and Sierra Club’s Gender, Equity and Environment Program will host a conversation with leaders from the U.S. Grassroots Accelerator for Women Environmental LeadersJulia Jackson of Grounded, A.Tianna Scozzaro of Sierra Club, and Kahea Pacheco of WEA.  They will discuss what CARE—Collective Action, Agency, Resilience, Equity—looks like in their communities and in the climate justice movement as a whole, and how you can take action for our communities and climate this Earth Day.

They write:
“For millennia, women have been the bedrock of the ‘care economy’—nurturing our families, laboring to better our societies, and stewarding the Earth and its precious resources.  As the climate emergency intensifies, so does the burden on our world’s women. Yet from these frontlines, women leaders are designing solutions from the ground up.”

 

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Heal Our Communities
Apr 21 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

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Oakland Privacy: Fighting Against the Surveillance State @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM' - SEE BELOW
Apr 21 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Email contact@oaklandprivacy.org a few days before the meeting to obtain Zoom meeting access info.

Join Oakland Privacy to organize against the surveillance state, police militarization and ICE, and to advocate for surveillance regulation around the Bay and nationwide.

op-logo.2.1We fight against spy drones, facial recognition, police body camera secrecy, anti-transparency laws and requirements for “backdoors” to cellphones; we oppose “pre-crime” and “thought-crime,” —  to list just a few invasions of our privacy by all levels of Government, and attempts to hide what government officials, employees and agencies are doing.

We draft and push for privacy legislation for City Councils, at the County level, and in Sacramento. We advocate in op-eds and in the streets. We stand in solidarity with Black Lives Matter and believe no one is illegal.

Check out some of what we worked on in 2020 and 2019.

Oakland Privacy originally came together in 2013 to fight against the Domain Awareness Center, Oakland’s citywide networked mass surveillance hub. OP was instrumental in stopping the DAC from becoming a city-wide spying network.  We helped fight and helped win the fight against Urban Shield.

Our major projects currently include local legislation to regulate state surveillance (we got the strongest surveillance regulation ordinance in the country passed in Oakland!), supporting and opposing state legislation as appropriate, battling mass surveillance in the form of facial recognition, mass aerial surveillance, and other analytics, and pushing back against ICE.

On September 12th, 2019 we were presented with a Barlow Award by the Electronic Frontier Foundation for our work, and on March 16th, 2021 s James Madison Freedom of Information Award by the Northern California Society of Professional Journalists.

If you are interested in joining the Oakland Privacy email listserv, coming to a meeting, or have questions, send an email to:

contact@oaklandprivacy.org


Check out our website: http://oaklandprivacy.org/

Follow us on twitter: @oaklandprivacy

 

“WATCHING YOU WATCHING US”

Oakland Privacy works regionally to defend the right to privacy and enhance public transparency and oversight regarding the use of surveillance techniques and equipment.  Oakland Privacy drove the passage of surveillance regulation and transparency ordinances in Oakland and Berkeley and is kicking off new processes in various municipalities around the Bay.  To help slow down the encroaching police and surveillance state all over the Bay Area, join us at the Omni.

67830
Justice 4 Mario Gonzalez
Apr 21 @ 6:45 pm – 8:00 pm

68973
APTP Virtual General Meeting @ Online
Apr 21 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Join us for our virtual monthly membership meeting to hear what’s going on and talk about how you can get involved

Register in advance for this webinar using this link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_G9lm8G1GTuGhobwlSnJsBQ

Each attendee must separately register. Do not share your registration confirmation with others.

We will have updates on the following:
– City Council budget process & our campaign to Defund OPD
– MH First
– More TBD!

APTP General Membership meetings are held the third Wednesday of every month at 7pm. Join us to find out how you can get involved.

68972
Apr
22
Thu
LAUNCH OF UC CENTER FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE
Apr 22 all-day

A special program will celebrate Earth Day and launch a system-wide University of California Center for Climate Justice, an initiative to address climate change as a social justice and equity issue. “The UC Center for Climate Justice seeks solutions that address the root causes of climate change and, in doing so, simultaneously address a broad range of social, racial, and environmental injustices.”

The Center for Climate Justice launch event will be held over two days, April 22-23, 2021, beginning on Earth Day. It will feature:

* Keynote presentations by food sovereignty scholar-activist Vandana Shiva and DOE Deputy Director for Energy Justice Shalanda Baker.
* A fireside chat with Green New Deal architect Rhiana Gunn-Wright (https://lnkd.in/geyGH83) and the director of the new center, Tracey Osborne.
* Panel discussions featuring California climate justice leaders, scholars and activists.
* A music and spoken-word celebration on the second day.

WHEN

Thursday, April 22, 9 AM – 1:30 PM
Friday, April 23, 9 AM – 3:30 PM

MORE INFO AND REGISTRATION HERE.

 

68960
Wild & Scenic Film Festival @ Online
Apr 22 all-day

Tickets and film info here.

Celebrate Earth Day 2021 at this year’s Wild and Scenic Film Festival While it’s not possible to gather at The Goldman Theater at The Brower Center due to the pandemic, this year’s online program will include twenty of the year’s top environmental films for viewing at home.  The exciting lineup is hosted by  the Alameda County chapter of the Citizens’ Climate Lobby (CCL) and this year’s co-hosts, The David Brower CenterEarth Island InstituteCommunities for a Better Environment, and Green the Church.  (All ticket proceeds go to support their work.)

The program features films about frontline communities fighting for environmental justice and restoration.  Attendees will receive a bonus session of on-demand access to five films about “Wildlife at the Edge” featuring the full-length, award-winning film, “Entangled” about the effort to save endangered Right Whales.  All of the films will be available for streaming from April 23-April 27.

See descriptions of all twenty of the films for the festival here.  A few examples:

  • Sônia Bone Guajajara, an indigenous leader fighting President Bolsonaro’s destructive policies in Brazil
  • Indigenous activist Ruth Alipay Cuqui, fighting a proposed mega-dam in the Bolivian Amazon
  • A group of youth environmental leaders in Bayview/Hunter’s Point.
  • Native people in Liberia fighting new palm oil plantations
  • Young activists in Wilmington, CA, fighting for a 2500-foot setback between communities and fossil fuel drilling

Sunflower Alliance is pleased to be a Community Partner for this event, and CCL is generously offering all Sunflower Alliance community members a $5 discount.  Please use the discount code CCLALA when registering.

 

68917
People’s Earth Day Rally @ SF City Hall @ Polk St. Steps
Apr 22 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Environmental Justice for Bayview Hunters Point & Treasure Island Residents!

Meet at San Francisco City Hall/Polk Street Steps to Demand that Mayor Breed & Board of Supervisors:
-Declare MORATORIUM on Lennar’s Shipyard development and unsafe soil excavation
-Declare PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY!
-Conduct full retesting, safe cleanup and removal of all radioactive and toxic waste at the Shipyard Superfund Site & Treasure Island

*Please Social Distance and Wear a Mask*

Sponsors: Hunters Point Community Lawsuit Plaintiffs, Treasure Island Community Lawsuit Plaintiffs, Bayview Hunters Point Mothers and Fathers Committee, Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice, Marie Harrison Community Foundation, Hunters Point Community Biomonitoring Program, SF Bay View, ANSWER Coalition/SF Bay Area, Our City, Breathe, Occupy San Francisco Environmental Justice Working Group, Extinction Rebellion/SFBay, California Environmental Justice Coalition, 350 San Francisco, Communities for a Better Environment – Richmond, Sunflower Alliance, Literacy for Environmental Justice, PODER, SF 1000 Grandmothers for Future Generations, Climate Reality Project Bay Area Chapter

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68955
DSA Night School: Tenant Power and Socialism @ Online
Apr 22 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Register here

 Since the start of the pandemic-induced shutdowns, the housing terrain has exploded with organized political activity. Be it from state-mandated shutdowns, or from poor economic conditions, millions of workers have found themselves without their usual wages. Of course, many workers are also tenants, and landlords have not ceased demanding high rents despite the ongoing economic turbulence. This has produced a series of system-wide tensions around housing in general and with the tenant-landlord relation in particular. In other words, the crisis has thrown light onto previously obfuscated fault lines that run directly through the housing terrain. To understand this crisis, we have to also understand the way in which housing is integrated into the circuits of capitalist accumulation. This class focuses on housing in these two ways: first, as a site of struggle, and second as an element of the wider mechanics of capitalist accumulation.

 

Priority Reading & Viewing:

  • Chapter from In Defense of Housing by David Madden and Peter Marcuse
    • Please read Chapter 1: “Against the Commodification of Housing”
    • Summary: In this chapter, Marcuse and Madden go over the basic condition of housing under capitalism: commodification. Commodification, a concept borrowed from Marx’s capital, is a process distinctive to capitalist society. A commodity has a use value and an exchange value. Housing has an obvious use value—the fact that workers must reproduce themselves. However the exchange value of a home—which takes the form of rent for tenants and a mortgage loan for homeowners—is elevated in capitalist society. Production and distribution of housing are centered on exchange value rather than use values, and this chapter describes how this happens and why we must organize against it.
  • Gentrification is a Feature, Not a Bug of Capitalist Urban Planning – Samuel Stein – Jacobin
    • Summary: Urban planners, under capitalism, face extreme contradictions that force them to decide between the wants of real estate capitalists and manufacturing capitalists. In this system, gentrification is a necessary by-product that ends up displacing families from areas they have lived for years.
  • Excerpt: No Job, No Rent: 10 Months of Organizing the Tenant Struggle – Stomp Out Slumlords, Metro DC DSA
    • Please read Part 2: “The Course of the Struggle”
    • Summary: While our other texts have viewed the housing problem from the perspective of capitalist social relations, this text switches focus and views the problem from the position of class struggle. Comrades at Metro DC seemed to have learned valuable lessons that can be helpful for our work here.
  • This is Parkdale (Movie – 30 min)
  • Very short, inspirational film that goes over a large rent strike launched by working class tenants in Toronto, CA. This is a good example of a struggle at the local level and demonstrates how tenants can fight against corporate landlords with high building concentrations in a local area.

 

68962
Film Premiere: Occupy the Farm @ Online / On Television
Apr 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Many of us will remember the heroic struggle to save the Gill Tract Farm in Albany, when 200 urban farmers walked onto a publicly-owned research farm and planted two acres of crops in order to save the land from becoming a real estate development.  Occupy The Farm, a documentary films about this struggle, will have its broadcast premiere on Sonoma and San Mateo PBS affiliates for Earth Day.  You can see the trailer here, and the whole film at these locations:
______________________________________________________________________________________

KRCB (Sonoma).  April 20,   7-9 PM   90 min film, followed by 30 minute panel discussion
Over-The-Air 22.1
Comcast 22
Comcast South Bay 200
Comcast HD 722, 1022
Direct TV / ATT Uverse 22
Dish 22

KPJK (San Mateo).  April 22,   8-10 PM   90 min film, followed by 30 minute panel discussion
Over-The-Air channel 60.
Comcast 17
Comcast HD 717, 1060
Direct TV / ATT Uverse 43
Dish 60

KQED viewers should be able to pick up KRCB and KPJK with no difficulty.  You can also stream KRCB on its website if you are viewing in its demographic area.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

Occupy the Farm follows a community’s struggle to preserve public land for urban farming.  The Gill Family transferred their farm to UC Berkeley in 1929, believing that it would always remain a farm.  But by the 21st century only a fraction of it remained open growing fields.  The film captures an intense conflict over the fate of the last remaining 20 acres of farmable land in the urban East Bay, when community members employed an ingenious and audacious strategy to confront a powerful institution that had ignored them.

When the 200 community members marched to the gates of this farm, they did not carry signs protesting the University of California’s plans to turn this research farm into a shopping mall.  Instead, they carried tents, tools and 15,000 seedlings.  They cut the padlocks off the gate, marched onto the land and planted two acres of crops.  What happened next changed the destiny of the land and presented a hopeful new strategy for activists.  From preparing the soil, to police raids, from lawsuits to overflowing harvests, Occupy the Farm reveals a resourceful community facing off against a powerful institution to provide access to healthy food and protection for public lands.

Following the film, a roundtable discussion will update the work on the farm during the pandemic, discuss new threats to this contested land, and reflect on what the pandemic, and climate change mean for the future of urban agriculture.  Participants include: Effie Rawlings, UC Gill Tract Community Farm member, and OCCUPY THE FARM organizer; Ashoka Finley, an OCCUPY THE FARM organizer and urban farmer who works in technology, and is now part of a start up in San Francisco; Will Smith, of Black Earth Farmers, who took the responsibility to manage farming operations just prior to Covid-19, and throughout the pandemic led farming, and food distribution for the Gill Tract; Charisma Acey, Associate Professor of City and Regional Planning in the College of Environmental Design, and Faculty Director of the Berkeley Food Institute, who looks at the potential for urban farming amid increased pressures on the available land; and Todd Darling, the film’s director/producer.

 

Update: The Farm Today (2021)

The occupation transformed from an occupation to an actual farm.  Organizers who had once been arrested for trespassing now have keys to the front gate.  Slightly more than one acre of land at the Gill Tract became the UC Gill Tract Community Farm.  Volunteers from the community work alongside researchers from UC College of Natural Resources, and have created a research farm that operates a weekly farm stand, distributes food to East Bay organizations, and studies how best to create resilient, urban agriculture.

During the pandemic, the need for resilient, urban farming became painfully obvious.  Tens of thousands of families in the Bay Area became food insecure.  Food banks were stretched to their limit as a result of Covid-19.  This one-acre farm was able to supply food to 70 East Bay families a week, at no charge, even with delays and the complications of developing COVID 19 protocols.  With the arrival of Spring, the farm is now busy planting crops, preparing for a productive 2021. Revolving crews of volunteers arrive to work the farm and are led by Farm Educators.

Now, however, the Gill Tract land faces a new dilemma.  UC Berkeley says they need housing for an expanded student population.  Land that currently contains the farm’s barns and offices, and that once housed numerous greenhouses, has been targeted by the University for a large, six or seven story dormitory.  Intended for graduate students, the dormitory would be built by a Texas company, American Campus Communities, which specializes in “the privatization process.”  The company would build the dorm on the Gill Tract and then own and operate it.  This new dormitory will shrink the growing lands as the existing facilities would have to be moved onto the remaining fields.  According to preliminary plans, the dormitory will provide no classrooms or space for the farm, nor offer any educational linkage to this farm.  Additionally, the University’s ten-year commitment to operate the UC Gill Tract Community Farm will soon expire.  According to UC Capital Strategies, the UC Regents still have to approve the plans and the contract with American Campus Communities.  The test of whether these public resources are for research for the public good, or will be “privatized,” is once again on the table.

68958
Apr
23
Fri
LAUNCH OF UC CENTER FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE
Apr 23 all-day

A special program will celebrate Earth Day and launch a system-wide University of California Center for Climate Justice, an initiative to address climate change as a social justice and equity issue. “The UC Center for Climate Justice seeks solutions that address the root causes of climate change and, in doing so, simultaneously address a broad range of social, racial, and environmental injustices.”

The Center for Climate Justice launch event will be held over two days, April 22-23, 2021, beginning on Earth Day. It will feature:

* Keynote presentations by food sovereignty scholar-activist Vandana Shiva and DOE Deputy Director for Energy Justice Shalanda Baker.
* A fireside chat with Green New Deal architect Rhiana Gunn-Wright (https://lnkd.in/geyGH83) and the director of the new center, Tracey Osborne.
* Panel discussions featuring California climate justice leaders, scholars and activists.
* A music and spoken-word celebration on the second day.

WHEN

Thursday, April 22, 9 AM – 1:30 PM
Friday, April 23, 9 AM – 3:30 PM

MORE INFO AND REGISTRATION HERE.

 

68960
Making Communities Whole: From Incarceration to Building Homes @ Online
Apr 23 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Join us for a virtual panel discussion with formerly incarcerated community members to share their personal journey coming home and their wisdom why communities should invest in the liberation of incarcerated community members. Our theme focuses on centering incarcerated peoples’ leadership,  building together to make our communities whole, and the urgent need for Governor Newsom to grant mass clemency and emergency releases to save lives from the devastating effects of COVID-19 in CA’s prisons. We will also have actions you can take to support incarcerated community members with pending clemency applications.

Register Here

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Making Communities Whole: From Incarceration to Building Homes @ Online
Apr 23 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Join the Ella Baker Center for a virtual panel discussion with formerly incarcerated community members to share their personal journey coming home and their wisdom why communities should invest in the liberation of incarcerated community members. Our theme focuses on centering incarcerated peoples’ leadership,  building together to make our communities whole, and the urgent need for Governor Newsom to grant mass clemency and emergency releases to save lives from the devastating effects of COVID-19 in CA’s prisons. We will also have actions you can take to support incarcerated community members with pending clemency applications.

Register Here

68944
Protest in Solidarity With Hunger Strikers for Yemen
Apr 23 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
The current War on Yemen is starving millions of Yemenis as the country faces bombings, blockades, and partition. Foreign powers seek to divide the country in order get their slice of the pie. While some members of the U.S. establishment give lip service to ending the war, it is clear that they have no interest in doing so and do not care about the Yemeni people! We say no to this hypocrisy! We say no to the War on Yemen!

We will be gathering to discuss the hunger strike and the situation in Yemen while also fasting in solidarity with Yemeni-American protestors Iman Saleh and her younger sister, Muna, who are weeks into their hunger strike in Washington, DC. We are also fasting in solidarity with hunger strikers in New York, Boston, and others across the country.

If you want to join or connect with others who are participating in the solidarity fast, visit facebook.com/unitedagainstwarandmilitarism

OR fill out this Google form: http://bit.ly/Fast4-23

OR send an email to solidaritywithyemen [at] gmail.com

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