Calendar

9896
Jun
8
Wed
Coalition for Police Accountability Meeting @ PUEBLO
Jun 8 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

This  is prime time folks. We have between now and early July to qualify our ballot initiative for an independent, empowered Police Commission for the November 2016 ballot. We need everyone to contribute if we are to succeed!

61025
Code Pink’s Weekly Peace Vigil @ on the steps in front of Senator Diane Feinstein's office
Jun 8 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

JOIN CODEPINK, WORLD CAN’T WAIT, OCCUPYSF Action Council and others at the huge PEACE banner

Feel free to bring your own signage, photos, flyers, …Additional signs and flyers provided.
Stand (or sit) with us and the huge PEACE banner.

On the steps facing Market Street, below Feinstein’s office,
Directly above the Montgomery BART/Muni station.

61071
Occupy the Farm Stewardship Assembly @ Gill Tract
Jun 8 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Excavation has begun for a grocery store on part of the Gill Tract. But Occupy the Farm and its allies are still fighting to preserve the whole 20-acre plot for urban agriculture. Occupy the Farm has been growing food and advocating to maintain this UC-Berkeley-owned patch of historic farmland for four years. On Earth Day 2012 the group began occupying and gardening part of the site, located along San Pablo Ave on the border between Berkeley and Albany.

The university has leased land on the southern half of the site to the Sprouts grocery store chain to build a supermarket, despite years of opposition by Occupy the Farm and its allies. Now excavation is taking place in preparation for building the store, but Occupy the Farm continues to push for its vision of preserving the whole 20-acre site as agricultural land.

Occupy the Farm will hold a Stewardship Assembly and Potluck to share its vision for the site as an area for organic agriculture research, a farm providing food for local residents, an agricultural education program, and an urban food forest. UC graduate student Katie McNight describes that vision in a new video 

Occupy the Farm is encouraging people to sign a petition  urging UC Chancellor Janet Napolitano to stop the construction and preserve the whole Gill Tract for agriculture. They also invite interested members of the community to attend the Stewardship Assembly and Potluck.RSVP

Background

The Gill Tract is the last remaining 20 acres of an historic farm UC has owned for almost a century. Part of the land has historically been used for agricultural research. This included a famous Center for Biological Control, starting in 1945, which experimented with using plant ecology and insects for pest control, at a time when the toxic pesticide industry was beginning to take over most American agriculture. Later Professor Miguel Altieri and colleagues used the site to continue this research in natural pest management and eco-agriculture.

Since the 1990’s the university’s Capital Projects division, which manages its real estate, has been working on plans to use at least part of the Gill Tract to generate revenue for the university, to make up for some funding lost because of the erosion of support for public education. Continued opposition from Gill Tract neighbors, environmentalists, and advocates of urban agriculture stalled these plans for years, but construction finally began on the south side of the site earlier this year.

Occupy the Farm and its allies condemn the destruction of this valuable piece of fertile farmland in the middle of the city and continue to fight to preserve the whole 20-acre site for agriculture.

RSVP

61068
Eastbay Homes Not Jails @ Omni Commons
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Open as MANY homes as possible…

Hold them as long as possible…

61035
Introduction to SURJ @ SEIU - 2nd floor
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Our next Intro to SURJ Meeting. Come learn about our mission and goals and the work of our ongoing committees – Basebuilding, Communications, Fundraising, Mobilization, San Francisco, and Youth and Families.

61090
Jun
9
Thu
Fight Santa Rita Jail Expansion @ Alameda County Bldg
Jun 9 @ 9:30 am – 12:00 pm

TURN UP with us at the June 9th Public Protections Meeting to OPPOSE Alameda County’s $61 million Santa Rita Jail construction project that has been approved without the community’s consent.

The jail expansion is being presented and folded into other projects as an “imporvement project” in order to gain supervisor votes. We need to flex our growing grassroots community power to our Board of Supervisors so they will prioritize spending on county care, not cages!

Will you be there to help us change the tide right here in our community? Offer your public comments to prioritize spending on mental health and community-based programs.

We encourage community members to join us outside at the Alameda County Administrative Building at 9:30am. We will then move into the county chambers at 10am to collectively voice our opposition.

61100
Stop the New Alameda County Jail @ Ella Baker Center Offices, suite 1125
Jun 9 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

The Sheriff wants to build a new $55 million jail expansion at Santa Rita for treating mentally ill inmate.  It needs to be stopped in its tracks and the money redirected to mental health treatment outside of jail.

We’ve got some momentum to re-invigorate and have a lot to discuss with the decarceration plan. Here a tentative agenda for 7/28, feel free to add additional items by directly replying to me.

  • Check in
  • What’s happening, what’s coming up in the community
  • LeeLoo Update
  • Individual and org commitments
  • Shared leadership structure and coalition admin.
    • agenda setting
    • meeting location
    • facilitation
    • meeting frequency
    • listservs
  • Decarceration Plan

61001
Jobs for Freedom Town Hall @ Imani Community Church
Jun 9 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Join us for a town hall- let’s win 1400 jobs. It’s time for Alameda County to act by employing people impacted by the criminal justice system and youth in the school-to-prison pipline.

Pre-Registration form: http://bit.ly/jobs4freedom

61093
Justice for Mario Woods Coalition
Jun 9 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

The demand for justice is happening and needs you!

61072
Breaking Through Concrete – An Arts & Activism Celebration @ Starline Social Club
Jun 9 @ 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Breaking Through Concrete – An Arts & Activism celebration

This is a celebration. This is a gathering of local organizations and artist from impacted communities on the front lines of oil refineries, coal and oil train fights, displacement and gentrification. We will showcase artist who are exploring the impact of interconnected social and environmental justice issues that threaten the health and safety of our communities and our future, and offering solutions. Come and celebrate our resilience, our creativity, and our power.

This FREE, All ages, event features speakers, performance artists, musicians, and poets such as:

David Solnit (Artist in Residence for 350 Bay Area)
AshEl SeasunZ (Earth Amplified & Hip-Hop is Green)
Khafre James (Hip Hop For Change)
Desarie Harp (Wappo Native Performer)
Ajman (Black Men Determination Project)
DJ Davey D (KPFA: Hard Knock Radio)
Aimee Suzara (Filipino-American poet, performer, educator)

Sponsors:
• Stand (formerly ForestEthics)
• Communities for a Better Environment
• Asian Pacific Environmental Network

60994
Screening of: A Jihad for Love @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists’ Hall
Jun 9 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

a_jihad_for_love_poster.jpg Islam today is the world’s second largest and fastest growing religion. Muslim gay filmmaker Parvez Sharma travels the many worlds of this dynamic faith, discovering the stories of its most unlikely storytellers: lesbian and gay Muslims. A Jihad for Love was filmed in 12 countries and 9 languages and comes from the heart of Islam. Looking beyond a hostile and war-torn present, it reclaims the Islamic concept of a greater Jihad, whose true meaning is akin to ‘an inner struggle’ or ‘to strive in the path of God’ – allowing its remarkable subjects to move beyond the narrow concept of Jihad as holy war.

Sponsored by the BFUU Social Justice Ctee as part of our Conscientious Projector series.

61065
“Raw Deal: How the ‘Uber Economy’ and Runaway Capitalism Are Screwing American Workers” @ Hillside Club
Jun 9 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm
sm_steve_hill_in_berkeley.jpg original image (360x552)“Steven Hill’s groundbreaking book on the part-time, unstable Uber Economy shows how a sub-economy becomes a work of law-flouting regress undermining full-time work. Remote algorithms run riot!” — Ralph Nader, consumer advocate

Advance tickets: $12 : brownpapertickets.com :: T: 800-838-3006 or

Books Inc, Pegasus (3 sites), Moe’s, Walden Pond Bookstore, Diesel a Bookstore, Mrs. Dalloway’s
S.F. – Modern Times.
$15 door

“Raw Deal: How the ‘Uber Economy’ and Runaway Capitalism Are Screwing American Workers” could not be more timely. With every jarring day our economy seems to be more seriously broken, the social contract erased, what remains of available work no longer offers us pensions or jobs with benefits. Gigs, freelancing and winging it seem to be the future. Steven Hill describes the predicament as a growing army of “freelancers, temps, contractors, part-timers, day laborers, micro-entrepreneurs, gig-preneurs, solo-preneurs, contingent labor, perma-lancers and perma-temps.” Even if a job offers benefits, the high cost deductible for medical care is prohibitive. Hill warns that many of our future jobs will be taken by robots. Those in the young workforce coming up are overloaded with college loans they can hardly pay off. With our ever-growing population, higher living expenses and markedly fewer jobs, something has to give…

This book is a must read for those concerned about how technology is disrupting the way we work … how policy makers should respond to ensure that the growing number of workers in the “gig” economy earn adequate benefits.”
– Laura D-Andrea Tyson, former Chair of the US President’s Council of Economic Advisors

“Steven Hill’s groundbreaking book on the part-time, unstable Uber Economy shows how a new sub-economy becomes a work of law-flouting regress undermining full-time work. Remote corporate algorithms run riot!”

– Ralph Nader, consumer advocate

Steven Hill, a Senior Fellow with the New America Foundation, is the author of four books prior to Raw Deal: Europe’s Promise: Why the European Way is the Best Hope in an Insecure Age; 10 Steps To Repair American Democracy; Fixing Elections: The Failure of America’s Winner Take All Politics; and Whose Vote Counts. For more information, visit his website: http://www.Steven-Hill.com

Host Greg Bridges is a radio dj and journalist living in Oakland. He can be heard over KCSM 91.1fm (http://www.kcsm.org) Tuesday nights 6 to 9 pm, and Thursday nights 6 pm to 2 am, on KPFA (94.1fm) Monday nights 8 to 10 pm. He is a contributor to KPFA’s Hip Hop and social affairs show Hard Knock Radio. Greg has written for various publications including Jazz Now Magazine and Bayshore Magazine.

61066
Jun
10
Fri
No New SF Jail Coalition “Community Not Cages” Meeting @ Dept. of Public Health, Room 610
Jun 10 @ 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm

In December, The Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to reject state funding for the construction of a new jail in San Francisco. This decision is due to years of community organizing demanding more community resources that are accessible outside of cages. Currently, the city is convening various community stakeholders, with SF Department of Public Health and the Sheriff’s Office, to re-envision replacing the current jail. This city work group is now meeting monthly to decide what kinds of alternatives to incarceration can be built in SF, such as more funding for mental health and substance abuse services, more funding allocated to community based organizations, and the creation of affordable housing.

This month, as a member of the No New SF Jail Coalition, CUAV is inviting members of the LGBTQ community and allies to speak out for community based solutions, not incarceration. CUAV has long understood that practices of policing and incarceration are steeped in discrimination that most heavily impacts LGBTQ communities at the intersections of race, gender, and poverty since our founding in 1979. Because we know jails are inherently unsafe for anyone, especially queer and trans people, this Pride month we ask you to let the city of San Francisco know that Pride is not just a party, but a time to demand the end of state violence against queer and trans people.

Come out this Friday to this month’s meeting at DPH to express your fabulous dreams of what SF could look like if it invests in the wellness of our most marginalized communities rather than cages to lock people away!

#NoPrideInCages
#SolutionsNotSurveillance
#ComeOutAgainstCages

Take a look at No New SF Jail Coalition’s “8 Guiding Steps Towards Ending Jail” to give you inspiration! https://nonewsfjail.wordpress.com/2016/05/09/eightsteps/

61099
Jun
11
Sat
Refinery Corridor Healing Walk @ Ninth St. Park
Jun 11 @ 8:00 am – 5:00 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 next Refinery Corridor Healing Walk will be Saturday, June 11, from Benicia (Valero) to Rodeo (Phillips 66). This is a 14-mile walk, with two places along the walk where people can join.

The 2016 Refinery Corridor Healing Walks began on Saturday April 16th, with a 14 mile walk from the Pittsburg Marina to Martinez Shoreline Park, in celebration of our victory in defeating the WesPac oil terminal proposed for Pittsburg. The second Healing Walk of 2016  was a 9.5 mile passage linking the Shell and Tesoro refineries in Martinez to the Valero refinery in Benicia.  (For the latest news on Benicia’s campaign to stop Valero’s crude-by-rail proposal see Valero Wins City Council Delay.)

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

8:00 A.M. Water Ceremony
9:00 A.M. Registration
9:30 A.M. Start of Walk

Walk will end at Lone Street Park, Rodeo
For further information, including RSVP and BART directions visit Refinery Healing 

 

61069
38th Monthly Interfaith Prayers for Victims and Survivors of Violence @ Bahai Center
Jun 11 @ 9:30 am – 11:30 am

Monthly interfaith prayer meeting, held on second Sundays, dedicated to survivors and victims of violence and police terror in Oakland.

The Baha’i community of Oakland is organizing this gathering for the community to connect, share prayers, writings and poems from all spiritual traditions, reflect and recharge and build coalitions interested in healing.

Come share prayers, quotes, poems, and favorite passages from your scriptures with us. Simple breakfast will be served.

61094
A History of the Poor People’s Campaign in Real Time
Jun 11 @ 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm

May 14, May 21, May 28, June 4, June 11, June 18, June 25, 1-5pm

Using news photographs, memorabilia, reconstructed objects, documentary fragments, and original documents, contemporary artist Kate Haug re-tells the story of the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s last monumental social protest prior to his assassination. The exhibition features images and objects culled from Haug’s extensive research in the archives of the Associated Press, the popular press, and eBay, which have not been seen together before, bringing to life the complex ambition of King’s vision.

King began organizing the Poor People’s Campaign (PPC) in 1967 to unify America’s poor across class rather than racial lines, believing that economic parity was key to African American equality within the United States. The PPC culminated with a 3,000 person shanty town named Resurrection City, constructed on the National Mall in Washington DC. Resurrection City drew people from all over the country, was the nineteen sixties version of the 1932 Bonus March and a predecessor to “Occupy”. The exhibition time frame for this show mirrors many of the actual dates of the campaign, tracing the Resurrection City’s opening day to its final destruction.

The PPC echoes aspects of current social movements such as Black Lives Matter, Fight for Fifteen, and Our Walmart. In San Francisco, a city with one the highest rates of income inequality in the United States, King’s work asks pointed questions about the contemporary social contract and the democratic promise of America.

News Today: A History of the Poor People’s Campaign in Real Time runs from April 9, 2016 to June 25, 2016.

Gallery Talks:
Sat May 14, 2pm:
Justin Gomer Ph.D., Lecturer, American Studies, UC Berkeley
A discussion of the images in News Today as they relate to the shifting political landscape in the years after 1968.

Sat May 21, 2pm:
E.C. Feiss, Ph.D. Student, Art History, UC Berkeley
The Politics of Display

60968
Oakland Justice Coalition General Meeting
Jun 11 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

The next general meeting of the Oakland Justice Coalition. Join us to talk politics in Oakland, endorsements, campaigns, elections, ballot initiatives, canvassing, the Renters’ crisis in Oakland and next steps.

Come learn about the candidates we have or soon will be endorsing in races for school board and City Council.  Come learn what you can do to join the fight for a fair and just Oakland for workers, renters, homeowners and the homeless, school parents and school kids.

Directions:  go directly across 14th St. from City Hall at the crosswalk, continue in about 20 yards, it’s the building diagonally to your left.

We’re building a people’s movement driven by the power of organizations with different goals coming together as one to support each other and build collective strength. We have anchored our 2016 work in three demands, all captured in ballot initiatives proposed by community-led grassroots organizations.

  • Strengthen rent control and other tenant protections to stabilize rent prices and stop displacement of Black, Brown and poor people from the community they helped to build; as proposed by the Oakland Tenants Union and Citywide Network
  • Create a police commission with the authority to fire the police chief and conduct independent investigations of incidents of police violence; as proposed by the Coalition for Police Accountability
  • Establish a $20 minimum wage by 2020 and fair scheduling regulations, and mandate enforcement for both; as proposed by the Oakland Livable Wage Assembly
61095
Film Screening: “This Changes Everything.” @ Dimond Library
Jun 11 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Inspired by Naomi Klein’s bestseller, this uplifting documentary portrays communities throughout the world living on the edge of climate change. Communities like West Oakland, now threatened by coal.

Please join the discussion at the end of the film.

61007
Jun
12
Sun
Post Salon Community Assembly – Housing State of Emergency @ Geoffrey's Inner Circle
Jun 12 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Assistant City Administrator Claudia Cappio will speak at the Post Salon Community Assembly about the actions the city is taking on the Community Assembly’s 12 proposals as well as other actions of the city during Oakland’s 90-day Housing State of Emergency.

URGENT – HELP KEEP GAINS OF OAKLAND EMERGENCY HOUSING MORATORIUM

The Post Salon Community Assembly (with other local organizations) won a housing state of emergency that has lasted for the past two months. This ordinance has stopped hundreds and perhaps thousands of Oakland renters from having their rent raised above 1.7 percent (per year) and has prevented evictions without cause. But the ordinance ends on July 5. The Post Salon Community Assembly wants the city to take steps that will permanently protect the 60% of Oakland renters who typically earn less than $40,000 a year.

COME TO THE POST SALON TO DIALOGUE WITH CITY ADMINISTRATION ABOUT HOW TO MAKE THE GAINS OF THE EMERGENCY HOUSING MORATORIUM PERMANENT. (The Salon will also hear a brief report on the Police Commission initiative)

61098
Report Back from Palestine Prisoner and Labor Solidarity Delegation @ East Side Arts Alliance
Jun 12 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

In March 2016, a delegation of 19 former prisoners, Black Panthers, activists and scholars convened by Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi, professor at San Francisco State University, visited Palestine. This was the first U.S. delegation to focus specifically on political imprisonment and solidarity between Palestinian and U.S. prisoners.

Join us for slides, stories, reflections and discussion. With:

Emory Douglas, Minister of Culture, Black Panther Party, Rabab Abdulhadi, Professor, San Francisco State University, and other delegation members.

61075