Calendar

9896
May
3
Tue
Liberated Lens Local Filmmaker Series: THE WAITING ROOM @ Omni Commons
May 3 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm

The Waiting Room is a character-driven documentary film that uses extraordinary access to go behind the doors of an American public hospital struggling to care for a community of largely uninsured patients. The film – using a blend of cinema verité and characters’ voiceover – offers a raw, intimate, and even uplifting look at how patients, staff and caregivers each cope with disease, bureaucracy and hard choices.

Directed by Peter Nicks.
Director will be present for Q7A after the film.

Doors open at 6:30pm, film starts at 7pm.

Free popcorn!

60862
Oakland City Council Action on Coal @ Oakland City Hall
May 3 @ 6:30 pm – 11:00 pm

Event: No Coal in Oakland

Come to the May 3 meeting of the Oakland City Council to insist that the Council hire public health experts as an essential component of the review of the health and safety risks of shipping coal through Oakland’s bulk terminal.

No Coal in Oakland has been concerned about the Council’s intention to hire Environmental Science Associates (ESA).  At this point, our best hope is that they also hire Health Impact Partners (HIP) to analyze the health and safety concerns documented in the evidence.  HIP is a national leader in the field of health impact assessment based here in Oakland and would work with PSE Healthy Energy, an Oakland-based energy science and policy institute, and a panel of Bay Area public health experts with a variety of backgrounds, including environmental health (including air quality, water quality and noise), environmental justice, occupational health and medicine, and epidemiology.

By contrast, ESA is a firm known for producing reports favoring developers.  It is notorious in the Bay Area for writing the Environmental Impact Review that gave the green light to Valero’s contested crude-by-rail project in Benicia.  Many critics, from environmental and community groups to the California’s attorney general, have called that review inadequate because it fails to fully report the many negative impacts that project would cause.

Activists question ESA’s commitment to a fair review of the health and safety dangers of coal.  The team ESA proposes to do the review doesn’t include a single public health expert. No Coal in Oakland is insisting that the city also hire public health experts to summarize and synthesize the information received at a hearing on the impacts coal shipments would have on public health and safety in Oakland.

On February 16, at the urging of the Mayor who is strongly opposed to coal, the Council dropped a proposal to hire ESA.  No Coal in Oakland was hopeful that the idea of using ESA was dead.  Now a revised proposal from ESA seems headed for approval and needs to be supplemented with analysis by public health experts.  Strong public pressure is needed to tell the Council to hire HIP for this essential component of the review, and make sure the investigation of evidence is valid and unbiased. Come help push the No Coal in Oakland campaign over the finish line.

HOW YOU CAN HELP:  SIGN UP TO SPEAK OR CEDE TIME

The City Council allows public input on major agenda items such as coal, but each speaker only gets one minute to speak.  You can sign up to speak and then yield your time to someone else so that a speaker who needs three or four minutes can use your time.   We always need some people who have signed up to cede their time to others.

To get started, please use this link to sign up:

SIGN ME UP!

On the form enter your name, the date of 5/3/16, ‘coal’ in the “Item Number”, ‘City Council’ as the choice for “Comm/CouncilName.”

Finally enter ‘Yes’ as the choice for “Wish to Speak Concerning this Item,” if you wish to speak yourself.  You can also enter the name of the person you want to cede time to so that that person can have more time for full expression.  You can also cede your time by giving it up at the meeting even if you entered in the online form that you wish to speak.

After entering your speaker card form, you will get a confirmation number.  Bring this with you to the meeting.

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May
4
Wed
SF Town Hall: Homeless State of Emergency @ St. Anthony's Conference Room
May 4 @ 1:30 pm – 5:30 pm
What does the Homeless State of Emergency really mean for poor people?The Homeless State of Emergency is in the headlines and in the mouths of politicians, but what does it mean for people experiencing homelessness in San Francisco? Join us for a Town Hall discussion on what it means for our city to declare a Homeless State of Emergency as well as how to respond to the real emergency that has kept people poor and homeless for decades.

This conversation will be happening at St. Anthony’s Foundation on Wednesday, May 4th from 1:30-5:30 PM. Join us to learn, share information, & activate towards solutions to SF’s current homeless crisis. Dinner will be provided. Spanish translation will be available.

Co-Sponsors:
AIDS Housing Alliance
Compass Family Services
Dolores Street Community Services
Drug Policy Alliance
Episcopal Community Services
Eviction Defense Collaborative
The Gubbio Project
Mission Neighborhood Resource Center
Hamilton Family Center
Homeless Emergency Service Providers Association (HESPA)
Homeless Youth Alliance
Hospitality House
Larkin Street Youth Services
St. Anthony’s Foundation
St. Francis Challenge
Swords to Plowshares
Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP)

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60907
North America Premiere of Drone Whistleblower Doc NATIONAL BIRD @ Pacific Film Archive
May 4 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

We are pleased to announce the North American Premiere of our feature documentary National Bird at the Tribeca Film Festival in April and the West Coast Premiere at the San Francisco International Film Festival in May.

National Bird follows the journeys of three whistleblowers who are determined to break the silence around the secret U.S. drone war. Their stories take dramatic turns, leading one of the veterans to Afghanistan where she learns about one of the worst U.S. airstrikes to have impacted civilians. For the first time, the Afghan survivors, men and women, speak openly about what has happened to them.

National Bird was made by a team of mostly women – in front of the camera and behind.

We would love to share our film with you on the big screen and hope you can make it to one of our screenings. Each will be followed by a Q&A with protagonist Lisa and director Sonia Kennebeck.

Sunday, May 1, at 8 PM
The Victoria Theatre, San Francisco

Monday, May 2, at 3 PM
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, San Francisco

Tuesday, May 3, at 4 PM
Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley

For tickets, please visit the SFIFF website for more information.

And please forward this email, follow, like and promote us on Facebook and Twitter!

We hope to see you soon!

60799
NO POVERTY HOTELS IN OAKLAND @ Oakland City Hall
May 4 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Almost 40 East Bay hotel and food service workers flooded City Hall last week to tell the City Council that we don’t need poverty-wage hotels in Oakland – we need good jobs that support workers, families and communities of color. The workers will be back at City Hall tomorrow night – stand with them!

This winter, employees at the Holiday Inn Express on Hegenberger complained that their bosses were breaking Oakland’s minimum wage law. The City of Oakland investigated and issued a report showing many violations, and ordered the owners to pay back wages and a $5,000 fine.

But the very next month, the City gave the Holiday Inn Express owners a permit to open a new Hampton Inn in Chinatown.

Local 2850 appealed that decision, and our appeal will be heard by the Planning Commission tomorrow night. Please come out and show the City that our community has low-wage workers’ backs. This is our chance to support development that supports our community, and stop a project from hotel owners with a history of mistreating low-wage workers.

60906
SF POLICE COMMISSION MEETING #FRISCO5 @ SF City Hall, Rm 400
May 4 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

The police commission and the mayor are the only two governing bodies which have the power to fire the chief of police. Police Chief Greg Suhr will be at this meeting.  One of the Frisco 5 was admitted to the hospital this morning. We must show up en masse at this meeting to let them see, hear and feel the people’s discontent!

The meeting is in room 400 on the 4th floor.

http://sanfranciscopolice.org/meeting/police-commission-may-4-2016-agenda

60909
Film: How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can’t Change @ La Pena
May 4 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

RSVP For All Screenings

Our ally Amazon Watch is proud to have supported Josh by accompanying him and his crew to the Amazon to see firsthand the effects of climate change and the fossil fuel industry.

Stay after the film for a Q&A with filmmaker Josh Fox, environmental activist Tim DeChristopher, and Leila Salazar-López of Amazon Watch. Gabriel Mayers, a musician featured in the film will also perform.

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May
5
Thu
Certificate of Rehabilitation Workshop @ Suite 300
May 5 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

COR Flyer

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Protest Verizon – National Day of Action, Oakland Action @ Verizon Store
May 5 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Stand with Verizon Strikers

RSVP here: https://actionnetwork.org/events/support-verizon-strikers
This strike is a part of an upsurge in working class & oppressed peoples’ actions & movements: Shut down Trump, Stand against Islamophobia & immigrant bashing, Black Lives Matter, No to anti-trans laws, last year’s USW oil workers strike, the UAW Kohler strike, Wisconsin’s “Day Without Latinos,” the Chicago Teachers Union strike, the incredible Boston school bus drivers’ victory, the Fight-for-$15-&-a-union movement of low-wage workers, to name a few. A victory for the CWA and IBEW will be yet another boost that helps all workers that are fighting for justice in the workplace & society. Onward to victory! Our greatest weapon is Solidarity. This strike is about all of us!

60911
May
6
Fri
TIME CHANGE: #Frisco5 Vigil and Rally @ UN Plaza
May 6 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

As a showing of unity, let’s fittingly gather, connect and build as a community at the United Nations Plaza. As their health continues to decline, let’s gather in a peaceful loving show of support and solidarity for the FRISCO 5, those who have fallen in the struggle and victims of injustice. Meet new people and build new bridges. All power to the people! One love

60914
Remembering is Revolutionary – Alan Blueford
May 6 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

60913
First Friday tabling with Oakland Justice Coalition @ South End of First Friday
May 6 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Please join us at Oakland First Friday to table and canvass! We’ll focus on collecting signature for our three Oakland ballot initiatives, as well as voter registration.

We haven’t been assigned a space yet, but the political groups are always located together at the south end of the event on Telegraph between Grand and 23rd. We’ll have a table with two chairs and signage.

Please share this event with your friends! There is so much foot traffic at Oakland First Fridays that we’ll need all the help we can get.

We’re working to get these three measures on the ballot:

From the Coalition for Police Accountability: Measure X turns the current Citizens’ Police Review Board into a Police Commission that has power to approve police policies and discipline officers who are found guilty of misconduct.

From the Oakland Tenants Union: Oakland’s “Renters Upgrade” would expand Oakland’s current “Just Cause for Eviction” law and provide greater ability for the city to enforce existing laws amidst a wave of unfair evictions and widespread harassment as demand for housing in Oakland grows.

From Oakland Livable Wage Assembly: A Minimum Wage/Fair Scheduling ordinance that will raise Oakland’s minimum wage to $14/hr in 2016 and $20/hr by 2020, as well as implement fair scheduling similar to San Francisco’s recent ordinance and mandate enforcement of both.

These three measures represent a people’s legislative agenda, enacted through direct democracy at the ballot box. The Oakland Justice Coalition invites anyone who is concerned about Oakland’s housing crisis, police repression of communities of color and rampant income inequality to join us in building a grassroots movement for social, racial, economic and environmental justice.

60900
First Friday: Alan Blueford 4th Anniversary @ Alan Blueford Center 4 Justice
May 6 @ 8:00 pm – 11:00 pm

With Green for the Heart Chakra & Peace for what we Cultivate in the Space- Alan Blueford Center for Justice (First Friday). May 6th is the exact day Alan Blueford’s life was taken at 18 years old by an Oakland police officer. So we come together- hearts open, creativity flowing, band live- to transcend, so are you coming through?

 

‪#‎TatuVision‬ ‪#‎OneLove‬ ‪#‎ABC4J‬

60897
May
7
Sat
Boycott for SF Justice: In Honor of the Frisco Five
May 7 all-day

Endorsed by the Frisco Five Hunger Strikers:

BOYCOTT FOR SF JUSTICE: IN HONOR OF THE FRISCO FIVE. JOIN HERE.
If they are hungry for justice, we should be too!

In honor of the Frisco Five Hunger Strikers, who are fighting against police killings and terror, we invite you to partake in a MASS BOYCOTT OF CORPORATE RESTAURANTS, especially in San Francisco. Until Mayor Ed Lee fires corrupt SFPD Chief Suhr, we promise to BOYCOTT ALL CORPORATE RESTAURANTS!

The restaurants include:
McDonalds
Popeyes
Wendy’s
Carl’s Jr.
Taco Bell
KFC
Subway
And the many other corporate restaurants.

Boycotting for a righteous cause is nothing new. Gandhi led the Swadeshi movement for Indian self-sufficiency. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks helped lead the Montgomery Bus Boycott against segregation. For farmworkers’ rights, Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta, and the United Farm Workers boycotted grapes and Safeway stores. Boycotting is a successful strategy that all of us can contribute to for the sake of justice, for those who have been unlawfully killed by the SFPD, like Alex Nieto, Amilcar Perez Lopez, Mario Woods, and Luis Gongora Pat, all killed in the last two years.

By boycotting ALL CORPORATE RESTAURANTS, we make an international statement against police terror and corruption. We also prove our economic clout. Since they do not care about our lives, we must hurt them in their pockets. In turn the corporations will put pressure on Mayor Lee, as he functions in a puppet role.

Instead of eating junk, we have an opportunity to build unity. Share a cooked meal with friends and family. Pack your lunch ahead of time so that you do not need to buy food while you are out. If you must dine, choose a local small business “mom and pop” restaurant. Get to know your neighbors.

By joining this group page, I VOW TO BOYCOTT ALL CORPORATE RESTAURANTS, ESPECIALLY IN SAN FRANCISCO until Mayor Ed Lee fires SFPD Chief Suhr.

On this group page, share your strategies and sacrifices about not eating at corporate restaurants and inspire others too.

Our numbers cannot be ignored. Our dollars will be sorely missed. Our amor is always proven.

JUSTICE FOR ALEX NIETO!
JUSTICE FOR AMILCAR PEREZ LOPEZ!
JUSTICE FOR MARIO WOODS!
JUSTICE FOR LUIS GONGORA PAT!
JUSTICE AND LOVE FOR ALL THOSE UNLAWFULLY KILLED BY THE POLICE!

60919
Police Militarization, a Discussion. @ Niebyl Proctor Library
May 7 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

The Communist Party USA (Oakland/Berkeley)
invites you to a discussion: Police Militarization
Suggested Readings:

Ana Conner &Tara Tabassi, ‘Ending Police Militarization, One City at a Time’
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/33001-ending-police-militarization-one-city-at-a-tim

Stephen Graham, Cities Under Seige, The New Military Urbanism
http://libcom.org/files/Graham,%20Stephen%20-%20Cities%20Under%20Siege.%20The%20New%20Military%20Urbanism_0.pdf This is a book length piece – worth reading introduction and skimming the rest

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Suds, Snacks, & Socialism: U.S. Imperialism II Hands Off the Americas @ Starry Plough Pub
May 7 @ 2:00 pm – 4:30 pm

From the Peace and Freedom Party Platform: “The drive for greater profits by multi-national corporations which direct U.S. foreign policy is a major cause of war. We stand for peace between nations and the right of all peoples to self-determination. We support an ongoing socialist transformation everywhere.” We have confirmed speakers to address issues of war, imperialism, revolution, and socialism in Haiti (Pierre Labossiere), Puerto Rico (Ricardo Ortiz), and Venezuela (Laura Wells).

FREE! Please buy food & drink at the Pub. All ages welcome! FREE!

This is part of our on-going Socialist Forum Series on the first Saturday of every month. Doors open at 2 pm and the program will start promptly at 2:30 pm. The forum will end by 4:30 pm, but folks can stay and talk as long as you like.

The Peace and Freedom Party, born from the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960s, is committed to socialism, democracy, ecology, feminism, racial equality, and internationalism.

60890
May
9
Mon
Occupella: Tax the Rich Weekly Rally @ In front of the old Oaks Theater
May 9 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Sing for an hour on Solano Avenue at the old Oaks Theater, Berkeley.

60835
Will Oakland Ban Petroleum Exports? @ Oakland City Hall
May 9 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Come tell the City Council to ban exports of crude oil, fuel oils, and gasoline — as well as coal — from the new Oakland Bulk and Oversize Terminal (OBOT). The City Council has announced it will hold a hearing May 9 to consider this expanded fossil-fuel ban at OBOT, the marine terminal that is the focus of the campaign to keep coal out of Oakland.  We don’t yet know who will be providing expert testimony.  But certainly everyone who cares about local health and safety and global climate change –- especially those with expertise on these products — should come and speak in favor of the expanded ban.   To sign up to speak, go to:

http://www2.oaklandnet.com/Government/o/CityClerk/s/SpeakerCard/SpeakerCard/OAK032373

For “item,” you can put “oil.”  There is only one item on the agenda

60893
Final Hearing on Transparency, Accountability and Fairness in Law Enforcement in SF @ Buriel Clay Theater
May 9 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
OccupyForum: “You’re Under Arrest for Masterminding the Egyptian Revolution” @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor
May 9 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Ahmed Salah was imprisoned, tortured and nearly killed by the Egyptian authorities. After making it out of the country he was born in, by sheer luck, Salah’s memoir of co-designing and implementing the Egyptian revolution during the “Arab Spring” was published on April 4th, 2016. Salah will discuss his newly released book, and field questions and dialogue.

For more event information: https://www.facebook.com/events/115739705491611/

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