Calendar

9896
Jul
14
Thu
The Occupation of the American Mind @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists’ Hall
Jul 14 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Israel’s ongoing military occupation of Palestinian territory and its repeated invasions of the Gaza strip have triggered a fierce backlash against Israeli policies virtually everywhere in the world — except the United States. The Occupation of the American Mind takes an eye-opening look at this critical exception, zeroing in on pro-Israel public relations efforts within the U.S. Roger Waters, the narrator, is an English rock musician, singer-songwriter, and composer. He is best known as the bass player, co-lead vocalist, lyricist, and principal songwriter in the rock band Pink Floyd. Over the last few years, he has emerged as a prominent advocate for Palestinian human rights.
Sponsored by the BFUU Social Justice Ctee as part of our Conscientious Projector series for the 99%.

61237
Jul
16
Sat
Campaign Kickoff: Oakland vs. Big Soda @ Fruitvale Senior Center
Jul 16 @ 9:00 am – 1:00 pm

Help us kickoff the Oakland vs. Big Soda Campaign on Saturday, July 16th!

Hear from speakers about how the sugary drink tax will benefit you and the Oakland community. Learn how to talk about the tax and inform the community about the lies Big Soda is telling. After, we’ll head out into the community and make sure Oakland knows the truth about Big Soda and the soda tax. Light snacks will be served.

RSVP at this link.

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LaborFest: International Conference Against Privatization @ ILWU Hall
Jul 16 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm


International Conference Against Privatization


The effort to destroy unions and working conditions is directly connected to privatization and deregulation. In nearly every country of the world, public workers are under attack through outsourcing and deregulation. This educational conference will look at privatization in Latin America, Europe, and Asia.


Another key part of international policy that is being pushed through the US-controlled IMF and World Bank are trade agreements such as NAFTA, CAFTA, and the TPP. This conference will look at the history of so-called “Free Trade” agreements and how this has lowered working conditions and also brought about the destruction of health and safety conditions and the privatization of healthcare, housing, education, and all public services.


Another focus of this conference will be the relationship of privatization to corruption on a global level. The crisis in Brazil and other countries are examples of how privatization has led to a growing corruption crisis.
Speakers from around the world will connect the dots and explain how unions have organized locally, nationally and internationally to defend working people.


Endorsed by Transport Workers Solidarity committee, United Public Workers For Action (UPWA.info)

61240
Justice for Kayla: Art-Making Party @ Grassroots House
Jul 16 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm

This fall, Kayla Moore’s family will go to court to hold Berkeley and the BPD accountable for Kayla’s death in 2013.

Want to lend a hand in advance of this important fight? Come to our art-making party on Saturday, July 16th to create art that honors Kayla’s life.

We’ll be making posters, banners and other outreach materials. There will be a variety of ways to lend a hand; no need to have so-called creative talent. We’ll also have food to share.

Drop by between 11:30am and 4pm – and invite your friends!

61228
Pacifica’s Future as an Independent Media Network @ Sports Basement--Community Room
Jul 16 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Panel discussion by the KPFA Community Advisory Board.

Presentations on and discussion of:
• Finances of Pacifica’s 5 stations, affiliates and archives
• Program sharing, corporate underwriting and censorship
• Governance, legal issues and the 2016 Elections

The KPFA Community Advisor Board often receives questions and concerns from the community about challenges faced by the Pacifica Foundation and its importance as a free speech global force. We want to help people understand what is happening with Pacifica and how it impacts the programming, policies and community services of KPFA. Please join us for presentations and facilitated breakout groups, and give your input for KPFA’s management. and Local Station Board.

The meeting will be supported with careful facilitation, group agreements about participation and time sharing. If you have questions, information or resources you would like to share with us please send them to cab.kpfa [at] gmail.com

july_16_kpfa_pacifica_meeting_flyer.pdf_600_.jpg
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Jul
17
Sun
Refinery Corridor Healing Walk @ Lone Tree Park
Jul 17 @ 8:00 am – 4:00 pm

2014 Rodeo to Richmond Healing Walk

2014 Rodeo to Richmond Healing Walk

The Refinery Corridor Healing Walks, started in 2014 by Idle No More SF Bay, were inspired by the Alberta Tar Sands Healing Walks and many other similar Native American journeys. The walks connect the dots between the Tesoro, Shell, Valero, Phillips 66 and Chevron refineries.  Walk with Idle No More and the Bay Area Refinery Corridor Coalition to bring attention to the health risks and climate dangers posed by the explosive crude, tar sands and fracked oil these refineries want to bring through our communities.

The fourth and last 2016 Refinery Corridor Healing Walk will begin at the Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery in Rodeo and go to the Chevron refinery in Richmond, ending at Keller Beach in Richmond. There are places along the way where people can join in.

Dallas Goldtooth, the Keep It In The Ground Coordinator for the Indigenous Environmental Network, and Kandi Mossett (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara), Native Energy & Climate Campaign Organizer for the Indigenous Environmental Network, will be walking with us.

Join us as we walk in prayer and conversation for:

• Clean air, water and soil
• Safe jobs, roads, railways and waterways
• A vibrant, healthy future for all children
• A just transition to safe and sustainable energy

WHEN

Sunday, July 17
Water Ceremony 8 a.m
Registration 9 a.m.
Walk begins at 9:30 a.m.

For further information, including RSVP and BART directions, visit Refinery Healing Walks 

To Contribute to the 2016 Healing Walks:  GoFundMe Campaign

Post on Sunday July 17th, 2016 11:30pm

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BLOCK PARTY CELEBRATING BERKELEY CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER William Rumford
Jul 17 @ 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm

RumfordFood, documentary screenings, music, art and sculpture unveiling.

Join neighbors for an afternoon block party honoring Berkeley civil rights leader William Byron Rumford.

This free public event will feature music, food, film screenings, kids’ activities and festivities aimed at building community by celebrating the life and legacy of Mr. Rumford, a key player in the Civil Rights movement in California.

Mr. Rumford (1908-1986) was the first African American elected to a state public office in Northern California. Among other achievements as a California Assembly member
, he authored groundbreaking legislation which banned discrimination in employment (1959) and housing (1963). These laws helped to pave the way for similar federal legislation. In addition to his public service at the state level, Rumford played an integral role in the South Berkeley community where he lived for 50 years. He owned and operated a pharmacy at 2960 Sacramento Street from 1942 until 1981 which now houses a clinic named in his honor.

61316
Jul
18
Mon
Vigil for Nicolas Leslie, UC Student Killed in Nice @ Sproul Plaza (?)
Jul 18 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

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Fair and Impartial Policing – Berkeley PRC @ South Berkeley Senior Center
Jul 18 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm


The first meeting the Berkeley Police Review Commission’s “Fair and Impartial Policing Subcommittee,” which will address allegations of racial profiling in Berkeley.

Agenda:

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Police_Review_Commission/Commissions/2016/Fair%20-%20Impartial%20agenda%2007-18-16.pdf

This is the first in a series of meetings that will continue into the fall, so there will be numerous opportunities for the public to engage with the process.  Please know that your participation is essential to the commission’s ability to take a deep and honest look at the performance of our police department.  We need to hear from the community at every meeting.

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OccupyForum – The Sacramento Protest: Victory over Fascism @ Global Exchange, 2nd Floor
Jul 18 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

OccupyForum presents…

The Sacramento Protest:
Victory over Fascism

On June 26, fascists were chased off of their intended rally site at the California State Capitol building by hundreds of anti-fascist protesters. People from the Sacramento community and anti-racist protesters from around northern California began to assemble in the morning to prevent white supremacists from entering the capitol grounds and holding their hate rally.

Militarized police cornered the protesters on the street to allow space for fascists to assemble, but to their surprise the protesters heroically challenged them and took over the steps of the capitol building before the fascists could assemble.

The some-500 anti-racist protesters who covered the capitol grounds were people of many political orientations, races, genders, and ages united against the hate group and its preaching of deadly racist ideas. The counter demonstration was supported by, among others, Antifa Sacramento, Anti Police Terror Project, Sacramento Brown Berets, the Progressive Labor Party, various anarchist collectives, and the Party for Socialism and Liberation.

Anti-fascist participants in the Sacramento Action will tell about their experiences and lead a discussion on this event.

For background, see the reports on Indybay: https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/06/29/18788329.php

Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!
Occupy Forum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Time will be allotted for announcements.
Donations to OccupyForum to cover costs are encouraged; no one turned away!

61325
San Leandro Minimum Wage Vote @ San Leandro City Hall
Jul 18 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

All across the East Bay, cities are raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour!  The California legislature voted to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022!

Now, we have the opportunity to stand with working families in San Leandro to raise the minimum wage.  It’s been a long time coming. Join us on Monday, July 18.

Raise the Wage in San Leandro!
City Council Vote on San Leandro Minimum Wage Ordinance

61334
Jul
19
Tue
Justice 4 Mario Woods Press Conference: Standing in the Name of Justice @ San Francisco City Hall
Jul 19 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

61319
Ban Fracking in Alameda County! @ Board Chambers, 5th Floor
Jul 19 @ 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Alameda County BOS Votes on Fracking Ban

Across California, the dominos of fracking are toppling over. Butte County just banned fracking by a landslide 71% vote. Monterey is gearing up to beat back the oil industry on November’s ballot. Let’s make Alameda County next, and set the golden standard for the Bay Area and beyond.

This is the final vote in the community’s campaign to pass a ban on fracking in Alameda County! For the last two years, Big Oil has used delaying tactics and wild exaggerations to claim that a ban on fracking and other extreme methods of extracting oil and gas in Alameda County would affect the existing oil field near Livermore.

Now, we must come together one more time to defend our air, water, and living things in case representatives of Big Oil show up again and threaten to sue the county. We’ll provide provide signs and you’ll have an opportunity to speak if you choose to. Will you join us for this final vote to show your support for banning fracking once and for all in Alameda County?

Yes, I’ll be there!

Calling all fractivists!  The Alameda County Board of Supervisors votes on the proposed High Intensity Oil and Gas Operations Ordinance.   Alameda County could become the very first Bay Area county to ban fracking and other extreme extraction methods.  But it’s not a done deal, and we wouldn’t be surprised if the industry pulls some last-minute maneuvers.  We need to be prepared for anything they throw at us.

Passionate public testimony at this hearing—and letters and emails to Alameda Supervisors in the run-up—will ensure the passage of this important ordinance.  Let’s keep Alameda County frack-free!  Plan to arrive by 12:30 to fill the hearing room; Alameda County Against Fracking will provide signs and talking points. Big turnout is crucial, so please show up and represent.

 

 

RSVP here.

61296
Oakland Renters Coalition: Food, Rally and Pre-Briefing @ Oakland City Hall, 3rd floor, reserved room
Jul 19 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Food, Rally, and Pre-briefing before Council Meeting

Meet in the reserved room next to City Council chambers at City Hall, 3rd floor–there will be people wearing this sticker!

61313
Berkeley – Workshop on police body camera implementation. @ Old Berkeley City Hall
Jul 19 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Workshop on police body camera implementation.

Council will hear presentations from the PRC and from the City Manager/police chief.
Agenda: http://records.cityofberkeley.info/Agenda/Meetings/ViewMeeting?id=234&doctype=1

Note that the police department proposal differs from the PRC proposal in these respects:
1. The police position is to let officers review camera footage before writing their incident reports, except for an officer-involved shooting or in-custody death investigation.  The PRC made a broader exception for all use foo force incidents; this was in itself a compromise position. This issue is important to prevent officers from tailoring their report to the video.  Our position even allowed officers to review the footage and file an amendment.
2. The PRC proposed some very moderate provisions for public release of footage, for example, to the media with permission of the police chief or designee, an in compliance with a public records act request.  The police object to these provisions on logistical and bureaucratic grounds.
*** Additionally the staff proposes a very cautious one-year pilot program of only twenty cameras.  Body cameras have been shown to save lives and keep particularly people of color out of the mass incarceration system.  This proposal is much too conservative.
See the attachments in the link above for other less critical issues.
Council needs to hear from you to produce the best possible policy.

61331
Oakland City Council – Dueling Renter Protection Proposals @ Oakland City Hall
Jul 19 @ 6:30 pm – 11:45 pm

The Committee to Protect Oakland Renters (sponsor of, and collector of signatures for an effective rent control Initiative) is organizing a stepped up campaign to show councilmembers that broad components of Oakland civil society are concerned about the rental and displacement crisis that is pushing so many long time Oakland households out of the city.

We ask that you send a letter to Council Members Lynette McElhaney, Abel Guillen, Anne Campbell Washington, Dan Kalb, Mayor Libby Schaaf, in addition to your councilmember.

Email Addresses:  lmcelhaney@oaklandnet.com, dkalb@oaklandnet.com, aguillen@oaklandnet.com, acampbell-washington@oaklandnet.com, officeofthemayor@oaklandnet.com,
Select Emails:  ngallo@oaklandnet.com, dbrooks@oaklandnet.com, lreid@oaklandnet.com, rkaplan@oaklandnet.com,

In addition to sending the letter below in the name of your organization (or in your name as a member of your organization), please urge your members and colleagues to attend two very important events this week and next:

Urgently requested
Oakland Tenants Union and the  Protect Oakland Renters Coalition
_________________________________________________

Oakland City Council
1 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza
Oakland, CA 94612

To Oakland City Councilmember ___________:

(YOUR ORGANIZATION’S NAME) urges the City Council to approve placing Council Member Rebecca Kaplan’s “Renters Protection Act of 2016” on the November  ballot. This is the only legislation that will establish strong and lasting tenant protections and will safeguard the diverse communities that make our city unique.

The current crisis of displacement in Oakland has deeply affected many families and communities, including many of our own members. Working families of Oakland whose incomes cannot keep pace with rising rents are most at risk, and now that the moratorium on high rent increases and unjust evictions has expired, the Council desperately needs to act as the massive displacement that caused thr demand for the Moratorium will surely resume, with the unfortunate result that more families will be forced from their homes and from the City.

The Committee to Protect Oakland Renters (CPOR) supports Councilmember Kaplan’s legislation.  It is based on best practices established and functioning efficiently in other cities in California that have rent control ordinances. The policies that inform CM Kaplan’s “Renters Protection Act” have been drawn from what works well in these cities.

The “Renters Protection Act of 2016” will require landlords to petition for, and justify rent increases above the automatic pass-through that keeps owners at pace with the rate of inflation.  Landlord petitions will take the burden of having to petition off tenants when their landlord raises rents illegally.  This change will dramatically reduce the workload of the Rent Board.  Last year, 726 tenants petitioned the Rent Board, while in Berkeley, which has a landlord petition system, only 28 landlords petitioned for an extra increase.

Presently, tenants who live in buildings constructed after 1980 have no protection against being arbitrarily evicted.  For simple justice, the exemption date for the current Just Cause for Eviction law must be expanded past the present date of 1983. The current date of 1983 exempts far too many landlords and puts many good tenants at unnecessary risk. This, too, is a much-needed reform.

One of the reasons we are in this situation is the ineffectiveness of the Rent Board & Rent Adjustment Program (RAP). The City Council recently passed Councilmember Kaplan’s proposal to add alternate members to the Rent Board, which will enable the Board to hear more appeals and eliminate the backlog of unheard cases.  The proposal also expands the powers and responsibilities of the Rent Board & Rent Program to be more efficient in carrying out its various responsibilities. Anyone who has had relations with the Rent Board and Rent Program staff knows it is severely under-sourced to serve a City in crisis.

(YOUR ORGANIZATION’S NAME) urges you to approve the Kaplan proposal for the November ballot, and to let the voters of Oakland decide whether the need is ungent to put lasting tenant protections in place at this November election.  Only by establishing the needed changes by ballot, can residents can be  assured that the protections will remain in place for years to come.

Thousands of activists and advocates have been fighting for these common sense solutions to our displacement crisis for years. They know that failing to act now will force more people out of Oakland and destroy the fabric of our communities.

Sincerely
___signer’s name______ ,
YOUR ORGANIZATION’S NAME

 

Agenda Item

Subject: Ordinance Amending Chapter 8.22, Article I (Rent Adjustment)

From: Councilmembers Kalb, Gibson McElhaney and Guillen Recommendation: Adopt An Ordinance Amending Chapter 8.22, Article I (Rent Ajustment) Of The Oakland Municipal Code To:

  • (1) Modify Exemptions For Owner-Occupied Duplexes And Triplexes And Sustantially Rehabilitated Properties;
  • (2) Require That Owners File Petitions For Rent Increases In Excess Of The Annual Consumer Price Index Increase
  • (3) Change The Amortization Period For Capital Improvements To That Of The Useful Life Of The Improvement;
  • (4) Clarify That Certain Types Of Work Are Not Capital Improvements;
  • (5) Amend Timelines For Filing Petitions;
  • (6) Require Owners To Pay Interest On Security Deposits; And
  • (7) Amending Chapter 8.22, Article Iv To Permit Tenants To Choose To Pay Their Portion Of The Program Fee Either In A Lump Sum Or In Six Monthly Installments

 

Agenda Item

Subject: Renter Protection Act of 2016 (Rent and Eviction Ordinance Amendments Ballot Measure)

From: Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan

Recommendation: Adopt A Adopt A Resolution On The City Council’s Own Motion Submitting To The Voters At The November 8, 2016 Statewide General Election Proposed Amendments To The Rent Adjustment Ordinance (O.M.C. Chapter 8, Article I (8.22.100, Et Seq.)

  • (1) To Require Owners Petition For Rent Increases In Excess Of An Annual Allowance; And Proposed Amendments To The Just Cause For Eviction Ordinance (Measure EE (2002), (O.M.C. Chapter 8, Article Ii (8.22.300, Et Seq.) To
  • (2) Modify The New Construction Exemption To Apply To Units Constructed After January 1, 2002,
  • (3) To Require Relocation Payments For Owner-Occupancy Evictions,
  • (4) To Permit The City Council Limited Authority To Modify The Ordinances, And
  • (5) Amending O.M.C. Chapter 8.22 (Rent And Evictions) To Increase Transparency, Including Regular Reports From The Rent Program To The City Council And
  • (6) Removing The Requirement For Council Approval Of Regulations, And Directing The City Clerk…
61301
Oakland City Council: Citizens’ Police Commission Ballot Initiative @ Oakland City Hall
Jul 19 @ 6:30 pm – 11:45 pm

1.  Attend the City Council meeting on July 19th and speak (or cede your
time. https://solar.oaklandnet.com/Speaker/form

2.      Contact Council members (email, tweet, social media, phone) urging
them to accept the changes to the Kalb/Gallo measure offered by the
Coalition. Earlier, Kalb/Gallo had made changes some of which we agreed to
but some of which we disagreed with. We need to fight to have the original
language of our measure re-inserted so we want to ask the Council members to
vote “yes” on the 19th to accept the changes advocated by the Coalition (7
specific changes; see attached for specifics)

Dan Kalb    <mailto:dkalb@oaklandnet.com> dkalb@oaklandnet.com 238 7001
Noel Gallo  <mailto:ngallo@oaklandnet.com> ngallo@oaklandnet.com 238 7005
Desley Brooks  <mailto:dbrooks@oaklandnet.com> dbrooks@oaklandnet.com 238 7006
Abel Guillen   <mailto:aguillen@oaklandnet.com> aguillen@oaklandnet.com 238 7002
Lynette McElhaney  <mailto:lmcelhaney@oaklandnet.com> lmcelhaney@oaklandnet.com   238 7003
Ann Campbell Washington  <mailto:acampbellwashington@oaklandnet.com> acampbellwashington@oaklandnet.com   238 7004
Larry Reid       <mailto:lreid@oaklandnet.com> lreid@oaklandnet.com 238 7007
Rebecca Kaplan  <mailto:rkaplan@oaklandnet.com> rkaplan@oaklandnet.com 238 7008
Agenda Item

Subject: Police Commission Charter Amendment Measure

From: Councilmembers Noel Gallo And Dan Kalb

Recommendation: Adopt A Resolution On The City Council’s Own Motion Submitting To The Voters At The November 8, 2016 Statewide General Election

  •  1) A Proposed Amendment To The City Charter To Create The Oakland Police Commission, The Community Police Review Agency, And A Process For Police Discipline And
  • 2) A Proposed Enabling Ordinance Relating To The Oakland Police Commission And The Community Police Review Agency, And Directing The City Clerk To Take Any And All Actions Necessary Under Law To Prepare For And Conduct The Election
61300
Alameda City Council: Rent Control Ballot Initiative
Jul 19 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

61336
Film Night: Medium Cool @ Omni Commons
Jul 19 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Because the Democratic & Republican National Conventions are coming up later this month:

Medium Cool

Directed by Haskell Wexler (1969)

medium cool

John Cassellis is a tough TV-news reporter who covers violence and racial tension in the ghetto. When he discovers that his network has been giving his tapes to the FBI to look for suspects, he protests and is fired. He goes to cover the 1968 Democratic National Convention as an independent journalist, but instead of being an objective observer, he finds himself becoming personally involved in the violence that erupts…

Medium Cool is a critically acclaimed and obscure film from the 60’s about the unhealthy interaction between a corporate media in search of spectacle and violence and a restless and angry populace. It was notable for Wexler’s use of cinéma vérité-style documentary filmmaking techniques, as well as for combining fictional and non-fictional content. In 2003, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.

Doors open at 7pm, film at 7:30. Please note that this screening will be held in the basement! $5 donation appreciated, but no one turned away. Free popcorn!

~ Liberated Lens ~

61299
Jul
21
Thu
#BlackLivesMatter #FreedomNow Berkeley City Hall Sitin
Jul 21 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

As part of the Movement for Black Lives call for #FreedomNow Actions across the United States, we support the people of Berkeley in calling their city officials to make a Special Meeting to 1) Oppose By-Right Development and 2) Support Police Accountability by forming a strong Police Review Board and vote to put those measures onto the November election ballot.

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