Calendar

9896
Jun
9
Fri
The Welcome Home Project Opening Night @ Hayward City Hall
Jun 9 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Please come to the exhibit of the The Welcome Home Project Opening night.
The panel will feature moving stories by several of the participants in the Welcome Home Project. The photographer, Ruth Morgan, will be present and refreshments will be served.

I know it is a schlepp to Hayward, but the BART stops a block from the city hall gallery. I promise that you will be moved in many ways by hearing these powerful and compelling speakers talk about their many years of experience in the criminal justice system and how they turned their lives around. They all will share deeply personal stories of redemption, restitution, and restoration – true healing.

The exhibit is a powerful and compelling collection of photographs and stories of formerly incarcerated Alameda County residents that have turned their lives around after many years of involvement with the criminal justice system.  Ruth Morgan, is a nationally acclaimed photographer and Executive Director of Community Works West whose work was recently in the The Sentence Unseen show on Alcatraz. The Welcome Home Project humanizes the formerly incarcerated while adding a deeper understanding of the challenges of reentry. These stories are testimony to the power of resilience and determination in the face of the barriers that most formerly incarcerated individuals face.

Micky Duxbury

63134
Jun
10
Sat
SURJ Difficult Dialogues Workshop @ Sierra Club
Jun 10 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

How do we approach the challenging conversations in our lives, whether its about confederate flags, Donald Trump, cultural appropriation, Palestine/Israel, or even just racism and racial justice in general?

This workshop is an opportunity to dive in much deeper with structured time to practice a range of difficult conversations around highly-charged racial issues. We will be sharing some basic skill-building tools in how to approach conversations, and then explore scenarios relevant to the lives of participants. This will include examination of some of the ways that internalized sexism can impact our courageous speaking capacities.

Small group work, role-plays, and Theater of the Oppressed techniques will support seeing tough communication blocks in a new light. Well try out what feels challenging, in a relatively low-stakes and supportive environment, allowing ourselves time to debrief, reflect, and learn from each other.

Contact basebuilding@surjbayarea.org with ticket requests or questions.

The venue is wheelchair accessible.

63122
Solar Simplified I: Getting Started @ Ecology Center
Jun 10 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

Solar is more accessible and affordable than ever. Are you ready to make the leap to get your power from the sun? Should you? Can you? How? Solar expert Doug McKenzie will provide a strong foundation for your decision-making. Presentation followed by Q&A, so bring your questions!
Topics include:
Why:
the environmental benefits of solar
What: what a PV system includes & how it works
Solar Economics: Payback/ROI, rate comparisons with/without solar
Solar Financing: owning versus leasing, low-income options
Other Considerations: Contractors, home selling, Tesla tiles, policies
Jobs: The growth of solar in CA, US, the world, and how to get a foot in the door
Join this FREE event at the Ecology Center. More details & RSVP here. There’s also a follow-up event to go deeper on solar topics on Saturday, June 24th – check that out here.

63229
Jun
11
Sun
Refinery Corridor Healing Walks
Jun 11 @ 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Walk #1:  Saturday, April 8
(Scroll down for the additional walks)
We will begin near the Pittsburg Marina at 3 Marina Blvd in the City of Pittsburg, California

8:00 a.m. Water Ceremony & Registration
9:30 a.m. Walk Begins
There are several places along the walk where folks can join the walk – please see the details of the route below.

The walk will end at Martinez Shoreline Park, end of Ferry Street in the City of Martinez, California

Please feel free to join us for the prayers for the water at 8:00 a.m.  We will walk to the shore and make our prayers.  Feel free to bring a small bottle of water from your area to join the waters in the Carquinez Straights  (where the Delta meets the Bay) in Pittsburg.

Registration for the walk will begin at 8:00 a.m.  Walkers will be asked to agree to the Nonviolent Principles.  For details on what to bring/not bring, please go to “What To Expect” in the tabs above.

This walk is approximately 13.5 miles from beginning to end.  There will be support vehicles available for people who wish to take breaks during the walk.  Medics will also be available.   Water will be provided – please bring your reusable water bottle.

Walk #2:  Saturday, May 20th

We will begin near the Martinez Shoreline Park at the end of Ferry Street

in the City of Martinez, California

8:00 a.m. Water Ceremony & Registration
9:30 a.m. Walk Begins
There are several places along the walk where folks can join the walk – please see the details of the route below.

The walk will end at the 9th Street Park in the City of Benicia, California

Please feel free to join us for the prayers for the water at 8:00 a.m.   Feel free to bring a small bottle of water from your watershed to join the waters in the Carquinez Straights  (where the Delta meets the Bay) in Martinez.

Registration for the walk will begin at 8:00 a.m.  Walkers will be asked to agree to the Nonviolent Principles.  For details on what to bring/not bring, please go to “What To Expect” in the tabs above.

This walk is approximately 9.5 miles from beginning to end.  There will be vehicles available for people who wish to take breaks during the walk.  Medics will also be available.   Water will be provided – please bring your reusable water bottle.

Everyone will be taken back to their vehicles at the end of the walk.  If you are coming to the walk with friends and have two vehicles, please consider leaving one vehicle at the end.

Please consider CARPOOLING – You can sign up to give rides or receive a ride here:
https://www.groupcarpool.com/t/8wh0vr

Make sure you keep this phone number with you on the walk:
(510)
  619-8279

Scroll down to see the map of the walk.

We will begin in Martinez and walk through the Shell Refinery in Martinez on the public road.  It gets exciting when we walk across the Martinez Benicia Bridge over the Carquinez Straights!  Once we get to Benicia, we head over to the Valero Refinery where we stop to pray for clean air, water, soil and safe jobs in our communities.   We then walk through town to the 9th Street Park for the closing circle, a meal and the final prayers for the waters.

All walkers are encouraged to carry the water for at least five minutes in prayer for the life of the waters around the world.

Please go to the “What to Expect” page for more information:
http://www.refineryhealingwalks.com/what-to-expect.html

 

Walk #3 – Sunday, June 11th

We will begin at Ninth Street Park in Benicia

8:00 a.m. Water Ceremony
9:00 a.m. Registration
9:30 a.m. Walk Begins
There are two places along the walk where folks can join us – please see the details of the route below.

The walk will end at Lone Street Park in Rodeo

Please join us for prayers for the water at 8:00 a.m.   Feel free to bring a small bottle of water from your watershed to join the waters that we will be carrying in prayer along the walk and putting into the Bay at the end of the walk.

Registration for the walk will begin at 9:00 a.m.  Walkers will be asked to agree to the Nonviolent Principles.  For details on what to bring/not bring, please go to “What To Expect” in the tabs above.

We also request that walkers keep the Four Agreements in mind:
1) Be impeccable with your word
2) Don’t take anything personally
3) Don’t make assumptions
4) Always do your very best
For more information:  The Four Agreements

This walk is 10.8 miles from beginning to end.  There will be vehicles available for people who wish to take breaks during the walk.  Medics will also be available.   Water will be provided – Please bring your own refillable water bottle.

There will be three “return” points where people can be taken back to their cars at mile 4 and mile 6 (see map) and at the end.  If you are coming to the walk with friends and have two vehicles, please consider leaving one vehicle at the end. 

Sure you’re coming?  Please carpool to the walk by offering a ride or accepting a ride  as soon as possible by signing up here:
CARPOOL

Let us know you’re coming!  RSVP BELOW!

Make sure you keep this phone number with you on the walk:
(510)
  619-8279

We will begin in Benicia, home to the Valero Refinery, and proceed through Vallejo.  Crossing the Carquinez Bridge is always a treat!  Then we head toward the Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery in Rodeo , ending at Lone Tree Park.

Walk #4 in July

Sunday, July 16th
Rodeo Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery to Richmond Chevron Refinery California

We encourage folks to walk with us the entire day.  It is truly a beautiful, profound and inspiring way to make a difference.

We will begin at Lone Tree Park in Rodeo

8:00 a.m. Water Ceremony – Feel free to bring water from your watershed!
9:00 a.m. Registration
9:30 a.m. Walk Begins
There are several places along the walk where folks can join the walk – please see the details of the route below.

The walk will end at Keller Beach in Richmond 

You can join us at any time during the day of the walks.
Call this number to find out where we are: (510) 619-8279

Make sure to keep the phone number on you if you are joining us on the walk!

Registration for the walk will begin at 8:00 a.m.  Walkers will be asked to agree to the Nonviolent Principles.  For details on what to bring/not bring, please go to “What To Expect” in the tabs above.

This walk is approximately 13 miles from beginning to end.  There will be vehicles available for people who wish to take breaks during the walk.  Medics will also be available.   Water will be provided – Please bring your own refillable water bottle.

Everyone will be taken back to their vehicles at the end of the walk.  If you are coming to the walk with friends and have two vehicles, please consider leaving one vehicle at the end.   Carpool:  Sign up to drive or be a passenger here: CARPOOL

There will be two points where folks can get rides back to the beginning in Rodeo, at the Hilltop stop in Richmond and at the end at Keller Beach.

We will begin at Lone Tree Park in Rodeo within sight of the Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery and walking to Richmond, stopping to pray at several places including the Kinder Morgan facility and the gates of the Chevron refinery.  We will end at Keller Beach in Richmond, the last natural beach left in the San Francisco Bay where we will all enjoy a delicious meal made by Mike Bear and his family and  youth from Urban Tilth in Richmond!

Can’t come but want to support?  Welcome us at Keller Beach in Point Richmond and feel free to bring a dish to share if you would like. 

62536
Direct Action for Racial Justice: A SURJ Bay Area Training @ Solespace
Jun 11 @ 9:30 am – 3:30 pm

Join SURJ Bay Area for our sixth homegrown Direct Action training dedicated to teaching you the framework and the hard skills needed to take action for racial justice. This interactive workshop is designed to give you real-time experiences of being in a protest while also building our understanding of direct action from the perspective of white people participating in the movement for racial justice.

We talk about the importance of direct action, centering Black and POC voices, our perspective on relating to police, our legal rights, and more. We teach direct action skills through the use of scenarios, discussion and role plays. Space is limited to 60 people per workshop and you must pre-register through the SURJ website to attend.

Cost: The workshop has a suggested donation of $10-$35 to cover event expenses, and support future organizing within SURJ Bay Area and our partner organizations. No one turned away for lack of funds- please contact mobilization@surjbayarea.org for accommodation. Lunch will be provided.

Materials: Please take a moment if you have not already done so to familiarize yourself with the SURJ Mission, Vision and Values. Also, another document that guides a lot of our work is the BASAT Protocol and Principles for White People Working to Support the Black Liberation Movement.

Accessibility: The venue is wheelchair accessible. The entrance is a ground floor, street entrance. Bathrooms are ADA compliant. Please refrain from wearing perfume or heavily scented products our of respect for people with chemical sensitivities. There will *not* be sign language interpretation during the workshop, however, HOH folks will be accommodated with prioritized seating during group discussions and participatory activities. Inform people from our SURJ team, and we’ll do our best to accommodate you.

Contact: mobilization@surjbayarea.org with any questions or concerns.

http://www.surjbayarea.org/direct_action_training_20170611

——————
SURJ Mission

SURJ is a national network of groups and individuals organizing White people for racial justice. Through community organizing, mobilizing, and education, SURJ moves White people to act as part of a multi-racial majority for justice with passion and accountability. We work to connect people across the country while supporting and collaborating with local and national racial justice organizing efforts. SURJ provides a space to build relationships, skills and political analysis to act for change.

SURJ Vision

We envision a society where we struggle together with love, for justice, human dignity and a sustainable world.

63151
Green Sunday: Public Banking: Here, There, and Everywhere! @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Jun 11 @ 5:00 pm – 6:45 pm

 

In the last few months, articles, conversations, and proposed legislation about public banking have been cropping up all over. It seems sudden – if you aren’t one of the people who have been working for well over five years to plant the seeds.

Because the topic is so new to most people, reactions range from blank looks to confusion and misapprehension about what a public bank is, what it isn’t, and what it could be.

The three speakers will cover many aspects of public banking, both potential and existing. To whet your interest, let’s just say that the Bank of North Dakota (the only currently-operating public bank in the country) has had fourteen consecutive years of profit, and that money is being reinvested in North Dakota, not funneled off to profiteers. For comparison, one reasonable estimate based on the relative sizes of North Dakota and Oakland is that an Oakland public bank could save the city $200,000 A DAY.

Come and learn more!

Craig Brandt is an attorney in the Bay Area who is deeply committed to the public bank movement. Recently featured in a public banking article in The Nation, Craig became a banking activist following the LIBOR scandal of 2015, which crystallized his opposition to Wall Street banking.

Christine McClintock has long been involved in the Green movement, from her time as an Environmental Extension Agent in the Peace Corps, stationed in Togo, West Africa, to her years as the Treasurer for the San Francisco Green Party, to her current role as a Financial and Compliance Analyst with the Sierra Club. She has been a part of the effort for the Public Bank of Oakland as well as Strike Debt Bay Area.

Debbie Notkin is a lifelong activist who veered away from public policy to feminist and body image issues in the 1980s and was pulled back by the energy of Occupy Wall Street in 2011. Since then, she has worked with Occupy Oakland Foreclosure Defense and Strike Debt Bay Area, as well as Friends of the Public Bank of Oakland, and is also working on bystander intervention projects.

SPONSOR: Green Sundays are a series of free programs & discussions sponsored by the Green Party of Alameda County and are held on the 2nd Sunday of each month. The monthly business meeting of the County Council of the Green Party of Alameda County follows at 7 pm; council meetings are always open to anyone who is interested. Please visit our website: https://acgreens.wordpress.com/

63218
Liberated Lens Film Night: Abundant Land @ Omni Commons
Jun 11 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

Director Natasha Florentino will be in attendance!

Abundant Land is a one-hour documentary about a Hawaiian community on Moloka’i opposing the biotech industry’s use of the island to test genetically engineered seeds. Agrochemical biotech corporations, including Monsanto and Mycogen Seeds, are depleting Moloka’i’s topsoil and fresh water while contributing to dust storms that spread pesticides into the ocean and surrounding communities. Abundant Land also offers a historical look at the intrusion and political underpinnings of chemical-intensive farming in Hawaii while portraying the rich legacy of traditional Hawaiian land management and farming self-sufficiency.

63135
Jun
12
Mon
2017 Homeless Workforce Conference – Richmond @ Richmond Memorial Auditorium
Jun 12 @ 9:00 am – 4:30 pm

2017 Homeless Workforce Conference

Working Upstream:

What Can We Do to Prevent Homelessness?

Breakfast 8:00 a.m. & Program 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. both Monday & Tuesday

CONFERENCE PROGRAM

REGISTER FOR THE CONFERENCE NOW!

HOTEL RESERVATIONS

Homelessness is a whirlpool that traps more than 1.6 million Americans each year, including tens of thousands in the San Francisco Bay Area. Many never escape and need rescue again and again.

Programs designed to lift the homeless and those at risk out of the whirlpool can become self-perpetuating “revolving doors.” Successful exits to long-term economic independence are few and may require large public expenditures over long periods.

Sustaining these low-performance traditional efforts — let alone expanding them to meet the growing need — seems unlikely in the face of tight local, state, and federal budgets. Where is the new money for “transitional” employment and “housing first” programs going to come from?

Our recourse is prevention — reducing the flow of at-risk people into the whirlpool of homelessness. That means  “working upstream” to address causes of homelessness closer to their source, including inequality of opportunity for education, employment, and housing.

What can we do today to work upstream to help those at risk to stabilize, recover, and rebuild their lives — before they become homeless?

63234
J20 Resisters – PACK the COURT
Jun 12 @ 9:00 am – 12:00 pm

COME OUT AND SUPPORT THE J20 RESISTERS!

Why is San Francisco criminalizing dissent? Show up for the J20 resisters at the courthouse, and call DA George Gascon and tell him to drop the charges!

January 20th, the day Donald Trump was inaugurated, was marked by widespread resistance across the U.S. Five months later San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon continues to use our city’s resources to prosecute a group of 11 protesters.

We believe the City should be dedicating its resources to protecting those most vulnerable under the new administration. Instead, Gascon is squandering City resources and becoming part of the troubling national trend toward increased repression of protestors.
Call George at (415) 553-1751 or email him at districtattorney@sfgov.org. Tell George to drop the charges against the J20 Resisters! Stop the war on dissent!
#Resist #J20 #Hellnawguration #EndPoliceTerror

63238
A Department of Violence Prevention? @ Liberty Hall
Jun 12 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

The Coalition to end violence and Councilmember McElhaney invite you to tell your story.

63228
OccupyForum presents: Film: BOOM: The Sound of Eviction @ Black and Brown Club
Jun 12 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!

OccupyForum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Boom: The Sound of Eviction

Sixteen years after it was released, this documentary from 2001 is, unfortunately, incredibly relevant, (and eerily familiar). Here is the promo from the film’s official site \ (and consider when you’re reading it that this was written in 2001). “Now the bubble has popped and most of the startups are gone, but the tidal wave of gentrification that came with the new industry has changed the city’s landscape forever. This new documentary takes stock of the dot-com boom and bust and asks the question: Who benefited?”

By turns humorous and scathing, Boom delves into the ironies and contradictions of the “New Economy,” and delivers a potent social critique that is ambitious in its scope, while remaining close to the human scale. The film moves easily between dot-com party crashing at one end of the economic spectrum, and painful moments with evicted families at the other. Boom features interviews with dot-com workers, real estate developers, and San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, as well as those who challenged the new economic order through community organizing, electoral politics, and direct action. In one scene, long-time residents talk about how hard it is to find a place to live. In another, a young professional standing in a coffee shop talks about the new condos and awesome night life.

Sound familiar?

This film provokes conversation on the current, much larger, Bay Area housing crisis (compared with the dot-com crisis of the late 90’s), and ethnic/economic cleansing of the past decade. How could this have happened again? Why is it way worse this time? Why didn’t SF City Hall and Sacramento respond to the first crisis by tightening eviction laws and protections for long-time residents? Why isn’t Willie Brown in prison?

(Okay, joking maybe).

Keep in mind that this is happening all over the US, all over the world in fact one of the symptoms (or strategies) of global capitalism. It’s just more acute in The Bay Area because of the huge influx of tech workers, unwitting but overpaid pawns in the chess games being played by Google, Apple, Facebook and the like, for domination of their sectors of the economy and perhaps society as well.


63231
Jun
13
Tue
2017 Homeless Workforce Conference – Richmond @ Richmond Memorial Auditorium
Jun 13 @ 9:00 am – 4:30 pm

2017 Homeless Workforce Conference

Working Upstream:

What Can We Do to Prevent Homelessness?

Breakfast 8:00 a.m. & Program 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. both Monday & Tuesday

CONFERENCE PROGRAM

REGISTER FOR THE CONFERENCE NOW!

HOTEL RESERVATIONS

Homelessness is a whirlpool that traps more than 1.6 million Americans each year, including tens of thousands in the San Francisco Bay Area. Many never escape and need rescue again and again.

Programs designed to lift the homeless and those at risk out of the whirlpool can become self-perpetuating “revolving doors.” Successful exits to long-term economic independence are few and may require large public expenditures over long periods.

Sustaining these low-performance traditional efforts — let alone expanding them to meet the growing need — seems unlikely in the face of tight local, state, and federal budgets. Where is the new money for “transitional” employment and “housing first” programs going to come from?

Our recourse is prevention — reducing the flow of at-risk people into the whirlpool of homelessness. That means  “working upstream” to address causes of homelessness closer to their source, including inequality of opportunity for education, employment, and housing.

What can we do today to work upstream to help those at risk to stabilize, recover, and rebuild their lives — before they become homeless?

63234
Oakland Finance Committee: Public Bank Feasibility Study @ Oakland City Hall, off Oscar Grant Plaza
Jun 13 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am

Item #4

Subject: Feasibility And Economic Impact Of Establishing A Public Bank
From: Finance Department
Recommendation: Adopt A Resolution (1) Amending The City Of Oakland’s Fiscal Year (FY) 2016-17 Midcycle Budget (Which Was Adopted Pursuant To Resolution No. 86250 C.M.S. On June 21,2016) To Appropriate One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000), From The Fiscal Year 2016-17 General Purpose Fund (1010) Balance For A Contract To Complete A Feasibility Study On Public Banking In Oakland, And (2) Authorizing The City Administrator Or Her Designee To Negotiate A Scope Of Work, Terms And Execute A Contract With Global Investment Company In An Amount Not To Exceed One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000)

 

The Finance Committee will be deciding on whether or not to fund our feasibility study. This is an important meeting; please come and wear your t-shirt if you have one. (Let us know if you want one.)

If you can join us on June 13,

1. Go online to https://solar.oaklandnet.com/Speaker/form and fill out a card. Choose item 4. Be sure to click Next and Register. Even if you don’t want to speak, get a card, so you can cede your time to someone who wants to speak longer.
2. Show up at 9:oo a.m.! We are early on the agenda for once.

Read the Friends of the Public Bank of Oakland mission statement.

The Public Bank of Oakland will:
  • Get Oakland out from under the control of nonlocal big banks
  • Reduce the cost of lending and borrowing for the City of Oakland and nearby communities that make use of the Bank
  • Solve the problem of millions of dollars in cash that the cannabis industry cannot legally deposit in private banks
  • Bring jobs, affordable housing, new small businesses and worker cooperatives, infrastructure, credit, and independence to our city
63243
Police Commission Legislation: Oakland Public Safety Committee @ Hearing Room 1 City Hall, off Oscar Grant Plaza
Jun 13 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Sign up to speak on Item # 8
Speaker’s Card

We need a large turnout of the community to advocate for the changes that are needed to the enabling legislation proposed by Dan Kalb. Noel Gallo stands with us but we need to show strong community support to back him up, since he is representing us!

Will you stand with us? The changes we seek are important to our conviction that the Police Commission function effectively, transparently and independently and can be found on our website: http://coalitionforpoliceaccountability.com

63249
Jun
14
Wed
Love on Trial : Book Signing and Talk @ Comal
Jun 14 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

When Kris Perry and Sandy Stier agreed to become two of the plaintiffs in the legal challenge to overturn California’s Proposition 8, which specified marriage as only between a man and a woman, they saw themselves as just ordinary people.

The couple had a great life, except they couldn’t officially marry. That bothered them, according to a new joint memoir, Love on Trial: Our Supreme Court Fight for the Right to Marry.

Perry and Stier will be talking about their story and signing books. he event is free and open to the public.

63254
SINGLE PAYER – ALL YOU WANT TO KNOW BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK @ Alameda Elks Lodge
Jun 14 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

A Panel of Health Professionals will answer all your questions on the Healthy California Act [SB562] Free event.

Sponsored by the City of Alameda Democratic Club, which has endorsed the bill.

63253
Jun
15
Thu
Alameda County-specific ICE Rapid Response training
Jun 15 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Resist Trump’s Agenda

63242
Organizers’ Orientation: Alameda Jail Fight
Jun 15 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Looking for more ways to plug in after Decarcerate Alameda County’s Town Hall?

Come join us on June 15th to talk about our next steps to getting care not cages for our community. We’ll talk about why we’re fighting the jail expansion in Alameda County, and how you can plug in.

We will also be preparing for the joint public safety/public health meeting on Monday, July 24th at 9:30am. Here the committees will be discussing the state of mental health in Alameda County- this appears to be a tepid replacement for the public forum we have been demanding for months. We need to show up and let them know that we will be heard!

Building is wheelchair/ADA friendly.

Feel free to reach out if you have questions. We’re looking forward to seeing you there!

63237
Rally to Save Historic Downtown Richmond Post Office @ Nevin Community Center
Jun 15 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

 

Richmond Leaders to Host Town Hall,
Rally to Save Historic Downtown Richmond Post Office

Richmond, CA — Following a public hearing convened by the United States Postal Service on May 31, Richmond leaders have announced a community-wide Town Hall meeting.

The town hall meeting is being hosted by the Iron Triangle Neighborhood Council and co-organized by the Office of Mayor Tom Butt, the Office of Congressman DeSaulnier, and Richmond Main Street Initiative.

“The community really spoke loud and clear at the public hearing. They were very concerned about the USPS proposal to relocate the Richmond Main Post Office and the lack of information about the whole process, especially the public comment portion,” says Alicia Gallo, Outreach Coordinator, Richmond Main Street Initiative.

In January a notice announcing that the historic Richmond Main Post Office had been “determined to be in excess by the Postal Service and is no longer necessary for Postal operations” was posted. The notice advised the public to submit written comments no later than February 8. Upon receiving inquiries from local leaders and elected officials, the USPS reverse course citing an error in procedure.

In mid-May, a second notice and two-page letter to Richmond Mayor Tom Butt was posted at the office. This notice announced a proposal to relocate retail post office operations from the Richmond Main Post Office (1025 Nevin Avenue) to the McVittie DDU facility (2100 Chanslor Avenue), as well as details regarding a public hearing and a public comment period.

More than fifty community members attended the public hearing, with roughly half offering comments to Dean Cameron and Augustin Ruiz of the USPS. Attendees included Congressman Mark DeSaulnier, representatives from John Gioia and Mayor Tom Butt’s office, Councilmember Eduardo Martinez, Richmond Main Street Initiative, Downtown businesses, residents, and retired postal workers. Also in attendance were organizers from Save the Berkeley Post Office.

All speakers passionately spoke out against the proposed relocation, citing that the relocation proposal would create severe hardships for residents and businesses. Many expressed concerns about the environmental and human impact of relocating services to the McVittie site, which is not accessible by public transportation, is located in a residential area, and sits at the intersection of two dead-end streets.

In addition to praising the Richmond Main Post Office for its central location, longtime residents also spoke about the local landmark for its historic and cultural value. Built in 1938 as a New Deal project, the building is a rare example of a one that has retained both its original form and function.

Amanda Elliott, Executive Director of Richmond Main Street Initiative, spoke about new development projects planned for the Downtown district. In the next five years, new infill projects will bring nearly 1000 new housing units and 60,000+ square feet of retail, all located just blocks from the current main post office.

Community members also questioned the decision making process used by the USPS to arrive at the relocation proposal. Data supporting the USPS assertion that the Downtown post office is not economically viable was not presented. Also not provided were reasons for deciding against relocating or consolidating services of other post offices in the area, including the McVittie facility, or exploring creative revenue generating ventures.

All community members are invited to attend this town hall to learn more about the USPS proposal and how to submit public comments. Organizers will have instructions and sample letters available. Those who are not able to attend the town hall meeting are encouraged to visit www.RichmondMainStreet.org/Save-Richmond-Main-Post-Office to learn more, read letters of support from local leaders and others, and to access the online petition.

 

About
Richmond Main Street Initiative
is a community based non-profit dedicated to revitalizing historic Downtown Richmond. RMSI partners with the City of Richmond, merchants, and residents to develop and improve downtown Richmond as a pedestrian-friendly urban village that offers products, services, arts and entertainment that reflect the community’s rich and diverse heritage. www.richmondmainstreet.org and www.facebook.com/richmondmainstreet.


Letters of Support:
Mayor Tom Butt, Congressman DeSaulnier, Supervisor John Gioia, National Trust for Historic Preservation, Richmond Main Street Initiative

Stay Connected

       
www.richmondmainstreet.org

Richmond Main Street Initiative
Revitalizing Historic Downtown Richmond
1015 Nevin Avenue, Suite 105

Richmond, CA 94801
(additional entrance at 402 Harbour Way)

63247
NLG: Bodies & Bondage A History of California Prisons
Jun 15 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

JOIN US FOR OUR JUNE MEMBERSHIP MEETING

Bodies & Bondage

A History of California Prisons

Every month, we invite members, non-members, activists, organizers, lawyers and legal workers to join us for the NLGSF “Join the Conversation” Membership Meeting

Each month will feature a political discussion. This month we will hold a discussion onBodies and Bondage A History of California’s Prisons with Jared Rudolph of the Prison Advocacy Network. Jared Rudolph is a criminal defense attorney and the founder of Prisoner Reentry Network,a nonprofit that supports successful transitions from incarceration to the community. California’s prison system started as a privately-run barge anchored in the Bay, and was embroiled in corruption, political scandal, and violence. Since then, our system has grown to incarcerate more people than the population of Berkeley. Prisons represent the power of the state in its most raw and basic form, and 165 years later Californians are still confronting the same fundamental questions: Why do we incarcerate people, what happens when they leave, and can we do better?

Refreshments Provided

THE NLGSF CHAPTER IS HIRING A

NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR!!!

Click HERE for the job description.

Applications due June 15th!

SUPPORT YOUR GUILD

Though we didn’t make our fundraising goal by our intended deadline … we have decided to extend our campaign.

We must extend our campaign because it is solelythrough the generosity of our members that we are able to sustain ourselves. This means we are not accountable to corporations or foundations.

We are accountable to the people. We are accountable to you.

If you didn’t donate, stop what you are doing and donate today.

If you did donate, forward this request with a personal note to all of your contacts and ask them to donate today.

The work demand is high. Our coffers are low. Resistance requires resources. If we don’t support our movements – who will?

Donate a little or a lot. But DONATE TODAY!!

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