Saturday, March 31, 2012

The PEOPLE'S COMMUNITY MEDICS will be giving a free emergency first aid training on Saturday, March 31 at 3:30 p.m. at the Oakland Occupy BBQ at 52nd and MLK Blvd.

Unfortunately, in low-income and communities of color--calling 911 does not guarantee an ambulance nor adequate health care when paramedics arrive. Because of this inequality, we have lost numerous loved ones unnecessarily.  We know that 911 is a joke (as the rap group Public Enemy said so long ago) and that our people have been suffering from a lack of proper medical treatment.
The People’s Community Medics is starting a project to work with the larger community in taking what's most important into our hands – matters of our health and safety.
The Occupy Oakland BBQ will last from 2pm to 6pm and is in support of the North Oakland Neighborhood Assembly & the fight to save Santa Fe Elementary. HEPAC will be providing free HIV tests on site and passing out condoms and safe sex kits! + Workshops from the Foreclosure Defense Committee and more.
Hope to see you there!
For more information call the People's Community Medics at:  510-239-7720 or PeoplesCommunityMedics@gmail.com
Bound Together Books presents the 17th Annual
Bay Area Anarchist Bookfair
2012-03-31 to 04-01

[http://bayareaanarchistbookfair.wordpress.com]
 

2012-03-31 "12th Annual Sacramento Cesar Chavez March"
10:00am until 5:00pm
Contacts
* LCLAA Sacramento Cesar Chavez Committee [www.LCLAAsacramento.com]
* Steven Payan, LCLAA Events Coordinator/Social Media [eyetileye@yahoo.com]
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Cesar Chavez dedicated his life in the belief of “A Workers Right to Organize” for better wages, working conditions and issues of social justice for ALL workers. We are here to continue that legacy, as a movement to bring our communities to organize. La Lucha Sigue…
 This Year's March will begin at 10:00am, Southside park, 8th and T Street, onto Cesar Chavez Park in Downtown Sacramento and back for Rally and Festival, Ending at Southside Park with Speakers, live musical performances, Lowriders, vendors and more...
 Bring your friends, families, banners, picket signs and constructive energy as we band together to address issues affecting us in our communities and around the country.
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SPECIAL LIVE MUSIC PERFORMANCES BY:
 • Aztec Dancers (Many different groups in one circle)
 • Wokini (Native Drum Group - Inter Tribal)
 • La Noche Oskura (Ska band)
 • Ayatollah (Hip-Hop)
 • Mentes Diferentes (Hip-Hop)
 • DJ Adrian Hernandez of BA Musik
 and More...
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LIST OF ENDORSERS:
SEIU Local 1000
Los Rios College Federation of Teachers
Sacramento Central Labor Council
Peace and Freedom Party Sacramento CCC
Sol Collective
ACLU (Sacramento)
Unión Cívica Primero de Mayo
AFT Local 2279
M.E.ChA de Sacramento State
M.E.Ch.A de Woodland Community College
M.E.Ch.A de Natomas Middle School
West Sacramento LULAC
Occupy Sacramento
Occupy Woodland
Peace and Freedom Party Yolo County
Lowrider Legacy
SEIU-USWW
Sacramento LULAC Lorenzo Patiño
* BA Musik
 To be added to the list of Endorsers, please send a detailed letter requesting to be added to the list; we are also accepting financial contributions to help defray from the costs of permits, printing and other costs of this 12th annual march to continue and honor the legacy of Cesar E. Chavez.
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"Mentes Diferentes" writes: Come Rock wit us March 31st for César Chávez Day to help Continue the Legacy of the Movement! We will be sharing a Stage with Ska band La Noche Oskura, Ayatollah and more... March with Civil Rights Leaders how organized and marched with Chavez. Bring your Picket Signs, Banners, friends and families to Fight the Power! Also Be part in the Music Video "The Struggle Continues" off The Desperados upcoming album, SacraMentes being filmed by brother, Greg Iron. Later, come join us at the Dinner Dance in West Sacramento afterwards to celebrate another year of hard work and also to honor our young student organizers with scholarships. Hope to see you there.... SI SE PUEDE!!

Occupy Eureka!!! Police outlaw protesting!

2012-03-31 "Four More Defy New Anti-Protest Ordinance at the Courthouse"Contact: James Decker (707) 761-5247, occupyeurekamedia@gmail.com
Download PDF of this Press Release:  http://www.box.com/s/6c823824b777cf2aa07b
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Eureka, CA:  Friday night on the steps of the Humboldt County Courthouse, four individuals holding a vigil for First Amendment rights were arrested in violation of a newly passed “urgency” ordinance. According to the ordinance, passed by the Humboldt Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, March 27th, no demonstration is allowed on courthouse property between 9:30 at night and 6:00 in the morning, and no signs are to be posted at any time. The vague and sweeping language of the ordinance makes illegal almost all free speech and assembly activity by any group at the courthouse, and criminalizes ordinary activity, such as food sharing and leaving property temporarily outside the courthouse.
Also, questioned by many, is the “emergency” nature with which the Board passed the ordinance, avoiding the normal public process of two public hearings and a 30 day wait for the measure to go into effect.
In response to the ordinance being proposed, the Occupy Eureka Civil Liberties group collected over 250 signatures over two days opposing the ordinance, more than double the amount of complaints lodged at the courthouse over a three month period. These complaints were used to justify the “urgency” aspect of the ordinance.
While being touted as a “health and safety” ordinance intended to “clean up” the courthouse for use during business hours, it prohibits the hanging of any sign and erection of any stage, banner, or canopy (and thus, exercise of free speech) at a location that has been the traditional meeting point for peaceful demonstration for over 40 years.
“We know that this unconstitutional ordinance was passed to target the Occupy Eureka protest. However, not only does it criminalize constitutional activity for Occupy Eureka, it has grave significance for any persons wishing to demonstrate in Humboldt,” said Hans Ashbaucher.
A day after the ordinance passed, on a fence erected in November to block people from gathering on the courthouse lawn, local nurse Pat Kanzler hung an American flag banner with the words “Freedom of Speech” painted on the bottom. Ms. Kanzler was arrested for violation of the new county ordinance.
The local crackdown in Humboldt County is part of a larger national trend of anti-protest legislation and police attacks on civil liberties.
James Decker declares “Right now in Humboldt County, a young man sits in jail for participating in a peaceful vigil on the courthouse steps. Taken with the increasing repression throughout the country, these are indeed chilling days for democracy.”
"Jack Herer Initiative" [www.CCHI2012.org]

Jack Herrer 24 hour telethon in Los Angeles — with Greenwell Cooperative. [ustream.tv/channel/​hempcansavetheplanet]


 



2012-03-31 "Oakland plan makes teachers compete for their jobs" by Jill Tucker
[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2012/03/31/MN1F1NSJ0C.DTL]
As part of a radical plan to reform three failing high schools in Oakland, current teachers who want to stay will have to compete for their jobs with outside applicants.
They also will have to agree to work nearly a month more each year, but the deal comes with a bigger paycheck.
The plan, which takes advantage of a small clause in the labor contract, skirts teacher seniority rights and is the latest attempt by a school district to get highly trained and reform-minded teachers in front of the most struggling students even if it means defying labor union doctrine.
In San Francisco this month, district officials skipped over less-senior teachers in 14 struggling schools when handing out pink slips.
In Los Angeles, a legal settlement last year allowed the district to spread layoffs more evenly across schools rather than rely solely on seniority. Several state legislatures across the country have banned the use of seniority in teacher layoffs.
Teacher unions see these moves as an affront to a sacred tenet of worker rights.
In Oakland on Thursday, the teachers union demanded the district rescind its plan for McClymonds, Fremont and Castlemont high schools and has filed an unfair labor practice complaint.
The superintendent is attempting to abuse a clause in the contract that allows the district to set different work requirements for "teachers on special assignment," union leaders said. It's a power struggle that will take veteran and committed teachers away from their students, said Betty Olson-Jones, president of the Oakland Education Association.
"This is really a slap in the face to our students," Olson-Jones said. "It's saying it doesn't matter who your teacher is."

Official disagrees -
District officials disagreed.
The plan isn't meant to purge the schools of teachers, but to ensure that every teacher assigned to them is committed to the hard work it will take to help struggling students succeed, Superintendent Tony Smith said.
"The kids in those schools need support, and the teachers need additional time and support to work with these kids," Smith said.
His plan would eliminate teaching positions at the three schools and replace them all with teachers designated as being on special assignment.
Those hired would be required to work an extra 18 days during the students' summer break. They'd receive an additional $5,100 on average.
 The district has made it clear that those who don't want the extra workload need not apply.
By Friday afternoon, more than 100 teachers had applied for the estimated 60 positions available. Forty-five of the applications were from teachers currently at the three high schools, district officials said. The deadline for applying was 11:55 p.m. Friday.
Teachers currently at the schools who decided not to apply but wish to remain in the district will be assigned to another district school.
Earlier this week, several teachers at the schools said they wouldn't apply.
Among them was Castlemont English teacher Rodney Brown, who has been at the school six years.
"My staying at Castlemont would only be as a classroom teacher not some made-up position," he said. "I'll teach at another Oakland school."
Fremont special education teacher Moss Hahn said he also would not apply for personal and professional reasons.
He said the schools don't need new teachers; they need to restore funding for librarians, security, art, music, dance and alternative languages like French.
The superintendent's initiative "seems like a questionable remedy at best and may turn out to be a disgraceful experiment," he said.
The plan does not require approval by the school board, but its seven members could intervene, requiring the superintendent to sit down at the bargaining table with union leaders to hash out a compromise, said board member Noel Gallo.
Gallo said the board will probably raise that possibility at a future meeting.
"I think what we have right now is a great deal of division," he said. "I need to be able to reach out and work with our teachers."
Yet, the status quo hasn't worked at McClymonds, Fremont and Castlemont high schools, where test scores consistently fall among the lowest of the low in the state and where less than half the students end up with a diploma, Smith said.

First attempt -
As far as Smith knows, no one has ever tried a plan like his before.
"It's aggressive and different, and it's contractual," he said. "Is Oakland satisfied with what we've got? Because what we've got is from what we've done."
At a recent teacher union rally outside Fremont High School to protest the superintendent's plan, ninth-grader Clinton Brand stood with a few of his teachers.
He wasn't clear on all the details of the changes coming to his school, but he didn't like the sound of it.
"I love all my teachers," the 14-year-old said. "I don't like having to get to know new people."

Rodney Brown, a Castlemont High School English teacher, speaks at a rally outside Fremont High Wednesday.
Photo: Michael Macor / The Chronicle


Friday, March 30, 2012

2012-03-30 "Democratic mayors challenge teachers unions in urban political shift" by Lyndsey Layton
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/nat/education/democratic-mayors-challenge-teachers-unions-in-urban-political-shift/2012/03/30/gIQA0xoJmS_story_2.html]
As a young labor organizer in Los Angeles, Antonio Villaraigosa worked for the city’s teachers, honing his political skills in the fight for a good contract. The union loved him back, supporting the Democrat’s election to the State Assembly, City Council and, finally, the mayor’s office he occupies today.
But now, Villaraigosa, a rising star in the national Democratic party, has a different view. He calls the teachers union “the one, unwavering roadblock” to improving public education in L.A.
Villaraigosa is one of several Democratic mayors in cities across the country — Chicago, Cleveland, Newark and Boston, among them — who are challenging teachers unions in ways that seemed inconceivable just a decade ago.
“This is a very, very interesting political situation that is way counterintuitive,” said Charles Taylor Kerchner, who has written two books about teachers unions.
At at time when most Americans believe that U.S. education is imperiled, and cities are especially struggling to improve schools, the tension between the mayors and the unions is causing a fundamental realignment of two powerful forces in urban politics.
 In the clash over what is best for children, adults on both sides are gambling.
 The mayors risk turning labor friends into enemies, a lesson D.C. mayor Adrian Fenty learned in 2010 when he lost his seat in part because teachers were enraged by his school reforms. The unions, meanwhile, risk appearing recalcitrant and self-serving, further alienating a public frustrated by failing schools and growing cool to organized labor.
The mayors want a raft of changes. They want to replace the uniform pay scale with merit pay. They seek to expand public charter schools, which are largely non-union. Some want to lengthen school days, requiring teachers to work more hours.
And nearly all of these mayors have set their sights on the one workplace protection that teachers have held central for more than 100 years: tenure.
The unions say many of the “fixes” embraced by the mayors are trendy ideas without evidence that they help children learn. Instead, they allow politicians to appear as if they are making improvements without having to confront the profound problems of urban schools, labor leaders say.
 “We don’t want to have honest conversations about poverty and segregation and race and class, all those other sorts of ills,” said Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union. “Those are really tough issues. So this gives them an excuse to focus on something else.”
Her union fought Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s effort to add 90 minutes to the school day in Chicago, which has the shortest school day of any major city. Emanuel, the former chief of staff to President Obama, got the Illinois legislature to pass a law that will allow him to impose a longer school day starting in September. It also makes it harder for the union to strike, among other things.
On the national level, teachers unions have started to recalibrate, looking for ways to work in partnership with politicians.
Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, acknowledged that the unions have been too focused on fairness for their members and not necessarily quality in the schools.
“We have made mistakes,” she said. “You have to really focus to make sure you’re doing everything you can so that kids are first. Tenure, for example. Make sure tenure is about fairness and make sure it’s not a shield for incompetence.”
First awarded in the 1920s to protect female teachers who could be summarily fired for getting pregnant or marrying, tenure is considered by teachers to be their main protection against firing for political or personal reasons.
But today, tenure makes it nearly impossible to get rid of weak teachers, the mayors say.
 “We know how difficult it is to fire a doctor in most of our states — it is significantly more difficult to fire a teacher,” said Villaraigosa, adding that the dismissal rate in L.A. is less than 1 percent and 97 percent of the teachers get tenure after two years. “Our current tenure practice is meaningless, so we are challenging it.”
The tough talk coming from Democrats has angered many teachers, who already feel under assault from Republicans. “Teacher unions feel extraordinarily betrayed across this country,” said Lewis of the Chicago Teachers Union.
Many of the mayors are emboldened by reforms promoted by the Obama administration, private philanthropies such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and organizations such as Democrats for Education Reform, a national political action committee and advocacy group.
 “All of us, in one way or another are swimming in their wake,” Emanuel said, referring to President Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan.
 The mayors say the economic health of their cities depend on better schools.
“Long-term prosperity depends on the ability to keep middle-class families — black, white, Latino — in the city,” said Ed Rendell, a Democrat who served as Philadelphia mayor and Pennsylvania governor. “There’s a growing understanding among the mayors that, in some ways, it’s the whole ball of wax.”
In Cleveland, Democratic Mayor Frank Jackson has proposed a sweeping education plan that would reset the relationship between the city and its teachers.
 Jackson wants to disregard seniority when it comes to firing and is seeking a “fresh start” provision so that future teacher contracts are negotiated from scratch, among other things.
“I don’t think Democrat or Republican, pro-union or anti-union, public school or charter school,” said Jackson, who is in his second term. “I’m going to have a conversation about educating children. When you do that, all those other things don’t matter. ”
“I’m opposed to anything that eliminates collective bargaining,” Jackson said. “But I’m also opposed to collective bargaining standing in the way of educating children.”
David Quolke, president of the Cleveland Teachers Union, said the mayor crafted his plan with input from business leaders but not teachers.
 “This isn’t an education plan,” Quolke said. “The message is ‘Let’s fire our way to improving the schools.’ Republican or Democrat, that’s just the wrong way to proceed in terms of school improvement. It makes it worse, in a sense, that he’s got a D next to his name.”
Jackson’s plan must be approved by the Republican-controlled state legislature and he has found a powerful lobbyist in Gov. John Kasich (R), whose own battle with unions made Ohio a national focal point last year.
Kasich tried to curtail bargaining rights for government workers but his law was repealed by voters in November after unions waged an expensive campaign against it. Now the Republican governor said he is praying for the Democratic mayor’s proposal in the hope that it could be expanded statewide.
 Jackson said he needs to take drastic action to win political support for more funding for the Cleveland school system, which is teetering on the edge of insolvency, faces a $65 million projected deficit and is among the state’s lowest performing school districts. In the past 10 years, city school enrollment has plummeted by 30,000, with students either moving out of the city or into public charter schools.
“I want a longer school year, flexible days, preschool — all that costs money,” said Jackson, who intends to seek a new school tax in November. “The only way we can get a levy is to demonstrate to people that they will be paying for something that’s different.”
Mayors are not only wrestling with immediate budget shortfalls but see a pension crisis looming ahead.
“Almost all the major districts have hidden huge costs in terms of pensions,” said Kenneth Wong, a political scientist at Brown University who studies mayoral control of urban schools. “The mayors are beginning to realize there is no way the current tax base can support current operations and also deal with pension liability. This is a huge factor in why we see mayors getting more involved.”
The two largest teachers unions, the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, are showing some flexibility by supporting some previously untouchable reforms, such as teacher evaluations. And some local unions in cities such as Baltimore; New Haven, Conn.; and Hillsborough County, Fla., have agreed to embrace some reforms.
Locally, the teachers union in Montgomery County has long collaborated with the administration. Teachers and principals work together to evaluate educators, identifying weak teachers who need extra support and dismissing those who cannot improve. The 12-year-old program has been held up by the U.S. Department of Education as a national model for labor-management cooperation.
But so far, they’re the exception.
“The problem is the teachers unions are decentralized, so you’ve got people on the national level saying one thing, but on the local level, the leaders are older, activist teachers who tend not to want much change,” said one former national labor leader who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to speak frankly about another union. “Rather than having a national strategy for improving quality, they’re on the defensive.”
Still, the mayors face some political risks from the unions, which remain heavy Democratic donors on the state and national level.
In addition to Fenty in D.C., Villaraigosa has also felt the wrath of the unions in Los Angeles. His pick for school board was defeated last spring by a candidate backed by the union. The union and the school board both pushed back against the mayor’s attempt to win direct controls of the schools.
Confrontations between teachers and mayors come as the public has grown cool toward teachers unions. In a 2011 Gallup poll, 47 percent of respondents said teachers unions hurt the quality of education, while 26 percent said they helped. That 2-to-1 margin is a new high point since Gallup began asking the question in 1976.
 “In education, most people believe they aren’t getting anything anymore,” said Ester Fuchs, an expert in urban politics who teaches at Columbia University and has worked in the Bloomberg administration in New York City. “If teacher unions stand in the way of trying new things, they’re going to be an easy political target.”
Democrats are still more likely to back teachers unions than Republicans and independents, Gallup found.
While most public school teachers belong to a union, just 7 percent of private-sector workers do, making it harder for the public to support pensions, tenure and other benefits they don’t enjoy in their own jobs.
“The teachers unions lost the battle of the op-ed pages,” Kerchner said. “Up until Randi (Weingarten), there hasn’t been a prominent voice making the case that what’s good for teachers is also good for kids is good for America . . . They’ve lost intellectual leadership on the one hand, and on the other hand, they’re engaged in a political blocking game. It’s a legitimate tactic, but not one you can use without cost.”
2012-03-30 "Oakland school-closure protest leads to 10 arrests" by Jill Tucker, Ellen Huet from "San Francisco Chronicle"
[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/03/30/BA2I1NS1I0.DTL]
The Oakland school board voted Thursday to lease out a soon-to-be closed elementary school after the end of this school year despite an angry protest 12 hours earlier that resulted in 10 arrests.
The demonstration, organized by an activist group called By Any Means Necessary to protest the planned closure of five city schools and the board's plan to lease some sites or allow charter schools on others, forced the school board Wednesday night to end its regular monthly meeting early.
Ten protesters were arrested early Thursday morning after they refused to leave the school board chambers even after the board adjourned for the night. They were charged with failure to leave school grounds, district police said.
The board reconvened Thursday afternoon and with a handful of protesters present voted 4-0 to approve a three-year lease with the Emeryville school district to use the Santa Fe Elementary site, one of the schools to be closed, to teach middle and high school students while it renovates its secondary school.
Board member Alice Spearman abstained.
The agreement will give Oakland schools an additional $500,000 in general-fund revenue for each of the three years.
A second controversial vote to allow two charter schools to use Lazear Elementary, also to be closed, was postponed. There are no current proposals for the other sites. The vote Thursday was the outgrowth of a controversial school board decision in October to close Santa Fe, Lakeview, Lazear, Marshall and Maxwell Park schools and merge eight others as a budget-cutting measure.
The closures and mergers will save the district an estimated $2 million a year, but the decision left parents and other community members furious.
Wednesday's and Thursday's board meetings to decide what to do with the empty properties rekindled the anger.
After Thursday's vote, onlookers pledged to continue the fight to keep the schools open.
"You need to be on our side, otherwise we will do what we need to do to defend ourselves," said Monica Smith, a By Any Means Necessary activist who was among those arrested Thursday morning. "I will ... make your life a living hell because that is what you're doing to Oakland."
Smith said she would bring the "wrath of Oakland" down on the board.
Superintendent Tony Smith said the lease would ensure that public schoolchildren would continue to use the space while boosting district revenue.



2012-03-30 "3 protesters arrested at UC Regents meeting" by Vivian Ho, Stephanie Baer from "San Francisco Chronicle"
[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/03/30/BAVH1NS3CB.DTL]
Three protesters were arrested Thursday at the UC Board of Regents meeting, when a few dozen activists, some stripped down to swimsuits, called for more transparency in state funding talks and an end to tuition hikes.
The students used the public comments portion of the meeting held at UCSF to accuse the regents and UC President Mark Yudof of being out of touch with student needs and questioned Yudof's support of a tax initiative that protesters say would not truly benefit public education. They said they were also upset that officials were holding a meeting during spring break when many students would not have been able to attend.
Tensions increased when board Chairwoman Sherry Lansing ended the comments period before everyone on the speakers' list had a chance to speak, students said.
"I have spent almost 22 hours round trip just to get here and they say they don't have time to listen to everybody," said Shelby Cohantz, a junior at UC San Diego.
The protesters began a call-and-response chant to broadcast what the speakers who were unable to address the board had to say.
Lansing repeatedly warned that the auditorium would be cleared if the students did not settle down. The regents left the room about 9:20 a.m., as police in riot gear filed into the auditorium.
Protesters then stripped down to bathing suits and put on leis and other various forms of "spring break gear."
Police issued an order to disperse and warned protesters that they had until 9:35 a.m. to leave the premises. At 9:36 a.m., protesters left the auditorium and officers put two men in handcuffs almost immediately while yelling, "Stop resisting, stop resisting."
The men were identified as Andrew Harkness-Newton, 26, a UCLA senior, and Mathew Sandoval, 32, a UCLA graduate student, who were booked on suspicion of obstructing an officer and failure to disperse. Harkness-Newton was also booked on suspicion of battery on a peace officer, and Sandoval with using violence to prevent a peace officer from doing his or her duty and a felony charge of "taking by means of a riot any person from the lawful custody of a peace officer," according to a statement released by UCSF.
Another UCLA graduate student, identified as Cheryl Deutsch, 27, president of the UC Student Workers Union, was also arrested on suspicion of obstructing an officer and failure to disperse.
A statement released by UCSF executive news director Amy Pyle said the arrests followed a scuffle in a hallway outside the meeting room after UC police declared the protest during the regents meeting an unlawful assembly and gave the protesters three warnings to leave the room.
Yudof said at Wednesday's regents meeting that he thinks the governor's tax initiative, proposed for the November ballot, "represents the best opportunity" for California "to clamber out of a sinkhole of fiscal uncertainty and move forward into a better, more prosperous future."
During Thursday's meeting, Lansing said if the tax initiative is passed, there would be no tuition increases for the next academic year.
"She leaves off the 'but' of what will be (the case) the following year," said Charlie Eaton, a graduate student at UC Berkeley and financial secretary for the student workers union.
UC students' tuition and fees have tripled to $13,218 over the past 10 years. UCLA senior Alex Yu, 22, said his parents can't afford to send his younger brother to a UC campus, despite his dream to study at one.
"It's horrible," he said. "They're forcing people to compete over a shrinking slice of the pie."

UCLA student Matthew Sandoval yells at UC police before being handcuffed.
Photo: Beck Diefenbach / Special to The Chronicle

Thursday, March 29, 2012

2012-03-29 "2-Year College, Squeezed, Sets 2-Tier Tuition" by Jennifer Medina from "New York Times"
[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/30/us/community-college-to-charge-more-for-top-courses.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print]
 SANTA MONICA, Calif. — For years now, administrators at the community college here have been inundated with woeful tales from students unable to register for the courses they need. Classes they want for essential job training or to fulfill requirements to transfer to four-year universities fill up within hours. Hundreds of students resort to crying and begging to enroll in a class, lining up at the doors of instructors and academic counselors.
 Now, though, Santa Monica College is about to try something novel. This summer it will offer some courses for a higher price, so that students who are eager to get into a particular class can do so if they pay more.
 The plan may be the first of its kind in the country, college officials and other higher education experts say, and if the college succeeds in implementing it, many other community colleges are likely to follow. Since 2009, enrollment in California community colleges has fallen by 300,000 students, to 2.6 million, and many believe the difficulty of registering for classes is the most important deterrent.
 For generations, community colleges have been seen as a social equalizer, providing a relatively inexpensive education for poor students, immigrants and others without the skills, grades or money to attend a four-year institution.
 So the two-tiered tuition structure being proposed here is raising eyebrows, and fundamental questions, about the role and obligations of community colleges. Will the policy essentially block some of the people it is designed to benefit? Many students believe the new policy — if the state does not block its implementation, which it could yet do — will unfairly exclude the poorest students and create a kind of upper and lower class of students.
 A financial squeeze since the recession led first to a reduction of federal and then state financing for colleges and universities. Since 2008, California’s community college system has lost $809 million in state aid, including $564 million in the most recent budget, even as more students than ever before try to enroll.
 Many colleges have reduced class offerings. Santa Monica College has cut more than 1,100 classes from its fall term.
 David Baime, the senior vice president for government relations and research at the American Association of Community Colleges, called the Santa Monica plan “extremely rare if not completely unprecedented.”
 But the impetus behind it, he said, is clear. “In many cases, and California most prominently, amid the recession there was a huge spike in enrollment concurrent with budget cuts,” Mr. Baime said. “The colleges have just maxed out in terms of how many students they can serve.”
 Community colleges are hardly the only places suffering budget cuts. Last week, administrators of the California State University system approved a plan to significantly limit the number of students it accepts next year because budget cuts have made it impossible to pay for any enrollment increase.
 “Every year we look around and think about how we can serve more students, but what we have now is not working,” said Chui L. Tsang, the president of Santa Monica College. “Literally thousands of students are missing out on opportunities we want to give them and have the ability to give them if we just had the money.”
 Officials in the California Community Colleges chancellor’s office said that they could move to block Santa Monica’s proposed tuition increase. They said that it was not clear such a change was legal and that the program could limit access for students, particularly those who did not have enough money to pay for the more expensive courses.
 Currently, each community college class costs $36 per credit hour. Under Santa Monica’s plan, the more expensive courses would cost $180 per credit hour — just enough to cover the college’s costs, Dr. Tsang said.
 While the college is still ironing out the details, it expects to offer about 200 courses at the higher tuition price, in addition to hundreds of regularly priced courses. College officials say that nearly every class is filled to capacity and that they are asking departments to choose which courses have the highest demand so they can offer more of those — typically basic courses in English, writing, math and science.
 For now, the college does not plan to offer the higher-priced courses in the fall and spring semesters, but will charge $180 per credit for all classes in the shorter winter term. Nearly every other community college in the state has eliminated the winter term because of budget cuts.
 “There is a real concern about equity here, because if there are higher fees that will only gain access for certain students, does that really address the problem,” said Paul Feist, the vice chancellor for communications of the California Community Colleges. “The reality is that there are hundreds of thousands of students who are not getting access to community college — and access has always been what we are famous for.”
 Santa Monica College, which has 34,000 students, is widely considered one of the most successful community colleges in the country, with one of the highest transfer rates to four-year colleges. Many students from Los Angeles choose to attend the school for their first two years as a way to save money.
 California community colleges have some of the lowest tuition fees in the country. And for decades, the community college system has operated under the presumption that lower fees translated into greater access, said John Aubrey Douglass, a senior researcher at the Center for Studies in Higher Education at the University of California, Berkeley. But as budget cuts have forced campuses to dramatically scale back what they can offer, that paradigm has begun to shift.
 “There’s a sense that if the colleges can generate the adequate income themselves, they may no longer be struggling with the lack of resources, because there is certainly a tremendous level of demand,” Dr. Douglass said. “It’s a much-needed conversation that we need to have — is it possible our tuition is too low? This is a very important move to push the envelope.”
 One donor has agreed to give $250,000 in scholarships for students who want to take the more expensive classes but cannot afford them. Dr. Tsang hopes that will make the program more attractive.
 Also, since Santa Monica is prosperous enough to have built a community college relatively rich in facilities, it tends to draw students from across the Los Angeles region. Some say such students may be more willing to pay higher tuition rates.
 Janet Harclerode, an English instructor and president of the college’s Academic Senate, said that many professors viewed the new plan as having a “real ick factor,” but that few saw any real alternative. Many instructors have already accepted extra students in their classrooms, even allowing a few to sit on the floor when seats were scarce.
 “We hope that this is just a stopgap measure, before taxpayers step up and the state really starts to reinvest in the colleges,” she said

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

2012-03-28 "Adult mentors, youth to make art in downtown Vallejo Saturday" from Vallejo Times Herald
[http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ci_20271760/adult-mentors-youth-make-art-downtown-vallejo-saturday]
The Solano Mentor Collaborative and Ministry of Praise will hold its annual "mentorship" event 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in and around the downtown Vallejo Farmers Market.
During the event, a longtime artist, Susan Cawthon, will guide the mentors and mentees in the creation of an art piece in the downtown area.
The artwork created during this event will be presented at the McCree-Goudeau Gallery in June.
The event begins at Fighting Back Partnership offices, on the third floor of the John F. Kennedy Library at 505 Santa Clara St.
Participants will then weave their way to the downtown area during the Farmers Market.
The so-called "March N2 Mentorship Event" is sponsored by the Solano Mentor Collaborative of Fighting Back Partnership, and funded by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
For more details, call Florence Parks at 648-5348.
2012-03-28 "Rick Tubbs speaks; Reagan and Thompson debate at Veteran’s Hall" by Jarrod R. Kohls from "River News-Herald & Isleton Journal"
[http://www.rivernewsherald.org/debate_3-28-2012.html]
The bell of liberty chimed clearly and loudly as the Delta Tea Party Patriots held their monthly gathering at the Veterans Hall in Rio Vista on March 20. Not only did the patriots welcome a barrage of speakers from far and wide, but also this installment of the meeting set the stage for a debate between District 5 Supervisor incumbent Michael Reagan and hopeful Skip Thompson who are both vying for the position.
To kick off the evening’s events, Republican congressional candidate, Rick Tubbs, addressed the packed hall in regards to his vision for America.
Tubbs, who has served in the United States Air force for 22 years and who ran for the same California District 3 congressional position against 36 year incumbent George Miller in 2010, delivered a presentation about what today’s government is doing to stifle the American dream and how he proposes to revive that fading dream.
“I do believe, with everything that is in me from the day I was born, that this country is the best in human history,” exclaimed Tubbs in the opening of his lecture. “The reason that we are the best is that, for the first time in human history we gave the power to the people. You, me; we all get to choose our destiny.”
Tubbs’ number one priority, upon achieving his desired position in congress is to balance the incredible amount of debt that the United States is stuck under. Having experience with balancing multi-million dollar budgets for the military, Tubbs maintained that the nation’s $15 trillion dollar deficit could absolutely be balanced in five years by cutting spending and bringing industry back to the U.S. In turn, this would stimulate the economy and effectively balance the nations budget in five years.
Second to addressing the economic struggles of the county, Tubbs touched on the subject of water scarcity in California and had an array of options to remedy this situation.
Though a far stretch from concerns in the Delta, the candidate expressed a desire to create storage facilities, such as dams, in the more mountainous regions of northern California. Tubbs did not address, on either side, the proposed peripheral canal.
“I want to be your congressman. I want to represent you,” said Tubbs. “ I want to fight for all the things that you want for this country.”
Immediately following the Tubb’s address the debate between Thompson and Reagan began. Each candidate was given 15 minutes to present his or her objectives upon gaining or continuing the position of District 5 supervisor. A coin toss was conducted in which, Reagan won and deferred the opening address to Thompson.
After a brief introduction, Thompson jumped into his address where his primary focus was the overspending that has occurred during Reagan’s occupation of the position, in regards to county employee’s salaries.
“Shortly after my opponent, Mike Reagan, took his seat he made a promise,” said Thompson. “And that promise was to get county employee salaries under control.”
Thompson explained that the county has incurred a $15 million structural deficit and that the deficit is directly associated with the amount of pay that many county employees receive.
 Thompson noted that Reagan did propose and see through the dissolving of the county employee management incentive programs; these incentives were replaced by a 4.7 percent salary increases.
“My opponent voted yes on these salary increases of the 14 departments, two of which were elected officials,” said Thompson. “There were raises given anywhere from $6,000 a year up to $19,000 a year.”
He further explained that these pay raises were given to employees that already make $200,000 plus a year and in a time period where the county had laid off more than 625 employees.
Thompson maintained that by adjusting these raises to a more appropriate pay scale, the county structural deficit would be decreased by over $6 million.
The intro to Reagan’s rebuttal was kicked off by his personal mission statement in regards to how he has approached the position of county supervisor and where he would like to focus attention if he was elected for another term.
“This campaign is about leadership. It’s about keeping your word and making tough decisions,” said the incumbent. “It is about protecting our taxpayers and working towards getting our economy to fire on a few more cylinders.”
 Reagan explained that the amount of pay that is given to county management is competitive with other counties in California and that by investing, what he described as “a median,” pay in these individuals, the county government is ensuring premium performance with premium results.
The incumbent candidate informed onlookers that, in his tenure, the county has extinguished several superfluous programs and cut salaries of management workers saving the county $2 million over the past few years, which is a bit shy of the $6 million that Thompson projected.
A point of concern that Reagan addressed in the waning minutes of his initial statement was in regards to the pressures that counties are being faced with as the state is delegating workloads to the county level as far as redevelopment and job creation.
Each candidate was afforded five minutes to comment on his or her opponent’s thoughts after  Reagan’s presentation, which left very little time for the question and answer portion of the debate.
The subject matter of the questions ranged from the candidate’s stance on Agenda 21, to preservation of the Delta and finally the candidates thoughts on natural resources.
When asked about his stance on regional drilling for natural gas, due to time restraints, Mike Reagan simply jested, “Drill baby, drill!”
Both candidates will be continuing their campaigns, as their names will be on the docket in the June primaries.

Photograph from "River News-Herald & Isleton Journal" showing Mike Reagan


2012-03-28 "JR Valrey to premier two documentaries at Oakland International Film Festival" by Galen Kusic, Editor of "River News-Herald & Isleton Journal"
[http://www.rivernewsherald.org/jr-valrey_3-28-2012.html]
One of the hardest working men in news media, Minister of Information JR Valrey is at it again – this time with two different full length feature documentaries. Valrey’s first installment, “Block Reportin’ 101” is a look back at JR’s career and how he has come to be so influential and respected within independent media and the good cause he carries out daily.
The film critically analyzes police and government terrorism in Oakland and the United States, focusing on several cases in recent years in the Bay Area. It is only fitting that this documentary premieres at a time when several recent issues that did not make it into the film are so relevant.
While some do not agree with Valrey’s style of reporting, one has to respect it. There are no smoke and mirrors with JR. He gives you the straight, raw uncut truth as he sees it and lets it be known. To add to that invaluable trait, Valrey continually asks thought provoking questions to teach and inform the reader/listener.
It is obvious in speaking with JR that his main goal is to educate the public through a form of media that takes a different stance to the “spin” we are constantly exposed to on television, Internet and most radio outlets. He is focused on bringing all oppressed groups together to gain a better understanding of the fight they are up against.
Having a weekly spot on Berkeley’s 94.1 KPFA’s Morning Mix at 8 a.m., Valrey receives a very broad range of listeners throughout the country. He is consistently focused on fighting oppression and giving a voice to the people that don’t necessarily have one, or have been marginalized through various outlets of media and the judicial system.
In the film, Valrey chronicles the other side of several incidents that have taken place involving police terrorism. JR is always the first on the scene, and the first to get the facts right. In this case, he was the only journalist to get the real inside story from Kenneth Harding’s mother, Denika Chatman about who her son really was and what their family represents.
Chatman discusses that Valrey was the only journalist that came to her home and really focused on getting the truth out about her son. He has never given up the fight, and continues to represent for those that had justice taken away from them.
JR focuses on telling the story through other citizen’s testimonies that there is always another side to what one sees on television. The constant stereotyping and neglect from the communities that are often reported about are what brought JR and his fellow colleagues to create the “Block Report”.
Through the medium of the “Block Report” JR conveys a message that rings true from the city block to the cell block. Through his work, he creates a dialogue that is relevant not only in the Bay Area, but throughout the world.
Valrey’s courage to touch on controversial issues has even landed him in court with a felony arson case following the Oakland rebellions after the Oscar Grant murder by police officer Johannes Mehserle. JR was a main proponent to get former Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums to speak to a crowd, but was then silenced when his camera was stolen from him and he was arrested and charged with trumped up, false allegations.
Through community support and legal facts, Valrey’s charges were dismissed. This is not an isolated case, as citizens are becoming more aware and documenting police brutality in their communities. Valrey discusses a similar activist’s case in Fly Benzo, a community activist in the Bayview neighborhood in San Francisco about a similar situation and the resisting arrest charge that he has been convicted of for simply documenting police activity.
Valrey interviews rappers and community activists Dead Prez throughout the film, along with Block Report contributor Rashida Petrovich and D’wayne Wiggins from Tony! Toni! Tone!  The perspective Valrey provides the viewer is one that resistance is indeed not futile, and that media is the largest tool to fight mainstream media and the propaganda we are constantly bombarded with as a nation.
The film was especially inspiring to up and coming young journalists that don’t want to fall into the trap of the “golden rolodex” of reporting. This term means getting information from a select group of sources that always have protecting the establishment in mind. While it is essential to get this information from “credible sources” it is equally as important to hit the streets and talk to the people that really know that is going on.
That is what “Block Reportin’ 101” is all about, and Valrey conveys his new brand of journalism in the film to the fullest. An eye opener to folks from any race or background, Valrey’s message transcends all walks of life to create a common good for mankind.
Look for a report next week on Valrey’s documentary “Haiti: Rising From The Ashes”. Both films will premier at the Oakland International Film Festival at the Oakland Museum. “Block Reportin’ 101” will premiere April 7 from 3:15-5:15 p.m. “Haiti: Rising From The Ashes” will debut April 6 from 4- 6:15 p.m.
2012-03-28 "Recall Intent Notice REJECTED: Recall front man Sam Kurshan gets close...but no cigar. He just couldn't get the paperwork right" by Marc Garman
[http://ibvallejo.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1381&Itemid=1]
Vallejo City Clerk Dawn Abrahmson has sent notice to recall front man Sam Kurshan that the Notice of Intention to Circulate Recall Petition he served councilmembers Gomes and Brown is NO GOOD. The letter issued by the city clerk (Notice of Insufficiency) states that the petition:
[begin excerpt]
does not meet the requirements of Elections Code section 11020(c) as to the minimum number of proponents required, and is found to be insufficient.
Elections Code section 11020(c) states in relevant part that: “[t]he minimum number of proponents is 10, or equal to the number of signatures required to have been filed on the nomination paper of the officer sought to be recalled, whichever is higher.” (Emphasis added.) In conformance with Elections Code Section section 10220, a candidate running for office of City Council in the City of Vallejo must obtain signatures of not less than 20, or more than 30 registered voters who are eligible to vote for the candidate for whom they have signed nomination papers. Consequently, the required number of proponents needed on the Notice of Intention is 20.
An additional insufficiency is that pursuant to Election Code section 11020(c) the Notice of Intention is required to have the residence address of each proponent.
[end excerpt]
Well, it seems that the proponents of a recall against councilmembers Gomes and Brown will have to go back to square one again and start over. And these are the people who want you to vote for their candidates in a hoped for (and very costly to the city) special election?

Photograph showing Vallejo drunk Sam Kurshan

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

2012-03-31 "Protest Shuts Down Hotel Sofitel Entrance Before Romney Gala Fundraiser"
[http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/31/18710467.php]
In Redwood City, Occupy Members Shout at Romney Supporters, "Dinner is Over, Go Home!"
 Demonstrators shut down the entrance of the Hotel Sofitel in Redwood City where Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney held a fundraising dinner on March 26th. Several protest groups coordinated to produce a show of anger aimed at the presidential hopeful and wealthy attendees of the event. One group erected a giant Etch A Sketch outside the hotel entrance, making light of a recent Romney aide's gaffe; others mocked billionaire supporters of his campaign by wearing faux fur and pearls and lifting glasses of champagne.
Occupy Redwood City, Occupy San Jose, and Occupy San Francisco members joined labor groups on the sidewalk with drums and other musical instruments to augment loud chants. Occupy Oakland members came from the east side of the Bay to the peninsula event and shouted as the fundraiser guests arrived, "Dinner is over! Go home!


2012-03-27 "Dinner is Over, Republicans! Protest at Romney Fundraiser" by Anna Scott
[http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/27/18710238.php]
Republicans have difficulty getting into Mitt's fundraising dinner, as protesters block the entrance of the Sofitel in Redwood City on March 26th and shout "Dinner is over, go home!"
video length 0:30

Your browser is not able to display this multimedia content.



2012-03-27 "Occupy Oakland, Occupy Redwood City and Republican Spoofers Protest Romney Fundraiser" by Mei Bo Chan

[http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/27/18710229.php]
Demonstrators protesting at a Mitt Romney fundraiser in Redwood City, California on March 26th included some who mocked the Republicans attending the event.
Demonstrators protesting at a Mitt Romney fundraising event in Redwood City, California on March 26th included many union workers, Occupy Redwood City protesters, and a group of San Francisco peninsula residents who mocked the Republicans arriving at the Sofitel Hotel. A small number of Republican dinner guests, some of whom had paid as much as $25,000 to attend, managed to make their way through the front entrance but most were blocked by protesters. Police had to reroute the Romney supporters, creating an embroiled traffic situation.
 Protesters from Occupy Oakland also made their way across the Bay to join activists on the peninsula side. They inspired a group of spoofers dressed in faux fur, fake pearls, and business suits to shout to police, "Officers, can't you just arrest them or something? Really!"
 The Raging Grannies and members of their Men's Auxiliary protested as “Billionaires for Wealthcare” in the street in front of the Sofitel. Faux Billionairess Bertha Gotrocks carried a bottle of champagne that her independently wealthy husband Chauncey Howard the III accidentally knocked over causing a loud explosive noise. "Heavens," cried Bertha, "with all the Secret Service around here to protect our candidate from this riff-raff, they might have thought a bomb had gone off, Chauncey. Now quick! Tell the police officer over there to clean it up...after all, they ARE on our payroll..."
 The protest was organized by Occupy Redwood City and San Mateo Labor Council.

 Top photo by Steve Rhodes under creative commons license of giant Etch-a-Sketch at the protest site.

Giant flag says "Republicans in Distress!" (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Anna Scott)

Blocking cars from entering (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Anna Scott)

Protesters in the street behind them, two "Billionaires" share an air kiss (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Anna Scott)

Labor was well represented (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Anna Scott)



2012-03-28 "Etch A Sketch Image Won't Disappear Soon: Message Delivered to Republicans at Romney Event" by Mei Bo Chan
[http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/28/18710246.php]
Protest at a Mitt Romney fundraising event caused a lot of commotion for people trying to gain entrance to the Sofitel Hotel in Redwood City, California on Monday. Some paid as much as $25,000 to attend, only to arrive at the hotel to find out the entrance was blocked by marching demonstrators; even activists from Occupy Oakland joined the rallying crowd. A giant Etch A Sketch with rotating messages was displayed in front of the hotel.
Protest at a Mitt Romney fundraising event caused a lot of commotion for people trying to attend a dinner in Redwood City, California on Monday. Some paid as much as $25,000 to attend, only to arrive at the Hotel Sofitel to find the entrance blocked by marching demonstrators. A giant Etch-A-Skit with rotating messages was displayed in front of the hotel.
 Union workers and labor representatives, Occupy Redwood City protesters, Raging Grannies and street theater "Billionaires for Wealthcare" were among the group of about 200 demonstrators. Most dinner attendees were blocked by marchers from entering the front entrance. Many others faced taunts from the faux billionaires in fake furs and pearls; some Occupy activists shouted, "Dinner is over, go home!" Police had to reroute the Romney supporters while attempting to keep the protesters from blocking the entrance at the same time.

Top Photo: Steve Rhodes under Creative Commons License (flickr.com)

As protesters start blocking the entrance... (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
Police try to control the scene

Signs taunting Republican fundraiser attendees (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)

Faux billionaires at entrance (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
"Billionaires for Wealthcare" holding an Etch A Sketch and a bottle of champagne, taunted the Republicans who tried to drive through the blocked entrance. photo by Steve Rhodes under Creative Commons License on flickr.com

Anarchists at first were unsure (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
It didn't take this demonstrator long to realize that "Billionaires for Wealthcare" were also there to fight the right wing. "It's so hard to find good help these days," he said, encouraging the billionaires with clever lines.

Corporations are People Too... (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
...so don't hurt their feelings! Another mocking sentiment.

Police tell Raging Grannies to get back on the sidewalk (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)

Raging Granny Lotus and her rockin' friend (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)

CodePink Women for Peace (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
Greeting a faux billionaire with cigar

Occupy Redwood City member poses as a CPA from nearby Seiler LLP (Photograph 2012-03-27 by Mei Bo Chan)
Occupy Redwood City member poses as a CPA from nearby Seiler LLP .... Located in Redwood City where the demo was held, Seiler LLP is a firm through which Romney has been getting super-PAC money

Monday, March 26, 2012

2012-03-26 "Hipsters get their own YouTube channel" by Casey Newton from "San Francisco Chronicle"
[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/03/25/BU111NOV5K.DTL&type=business]
At a scruffy studio in San Francisco's SoMa district last week, a group of nattily attired young people gathered to celebrate the hipster.
A documentary about a popular Instagram photographer named Bex Finch was projected on the walls, and as Finch described her love for analog film a snort erupted from the crowd.
"Sooo hipster," someone shouted. Audience members, who were sipping organic margaritas, laughed knowingly.
Whether they're ready for it or not, hipsters are about to get their close-up. The loosely defined subculture is the subject of a YouTube channel, American Hipster, that releases its first shows Monday.
Will hipsters watch programming about themselves? Will the world at large? Will YouTube, which is spending $100 million to create niche content like American Hipster, make its money back?
Seedwell, the San Francisco creative studio producing American Hipster, admits that it is an experiment.
"We think a lot of hipsters will hate our channel," said Peter Furia, a Seedwell co-founder. "But we think some of them will see some value in it. We think people who aren't so much hipsters will really enjoy learning more about some of these things they're seeing around them."
YouTube, a subsidiary of Google, believes channels like American Hipster are the future of entertainment. Niche content delivered over the Internet could ultimately disrupt television, executives say.
"We think we're in a pivotal moment in the history of video," said Jamie Byrne, head of original programming for entertainment at YouTube.
The company is investing heavily in that thesis, giving 100 channels like American Hipster funding to create original content. The channels will repay their advances with advertising revenue generated by the videos they create, and share revenue with YouTube thereafter.

Relative unknowns -
Some big names are part of the project, including Madonna, Jay-Z and Shaquille O'Neal. But most of the channels are created by relative unknowns. Seedwell is among those hoping to break out of the pack.
To do so, it has to overcome perceptions about its slippery subject. "Hipster" is used most often in the pejorative sense, referring to young, middle-class urban types with a fondness for independent music, alternative fashions, and artisan food and crafts.
While the term has its origins in the 1940s, it had a resurgence in the 2000s, starting in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn and radiating into conclaves of creative people in other big cities.
Almost from the start, hipsters have been an object of derision, chided for a perceived reliance on their parents' money and an overenthusiasm for cheap beer and trucker hats. As a result, few claim the term for themselves. In 2006 the satirical news site the Onion ran a story headlined, "Two hipsters angrily call each other 'hipster.' "
Mark Greif, writing in New York Magazine in 2010, argued that the hipster movement had essentially ended as it became absorbed into the culture at large.
"The mainstreaming of hipsterism to the suburbs and the mall portends hipster self-disgust," he wrote. "Why bother with a lifestyle that everyone now knows?"

Too big -
David Fine directs the channel's documentary series, "American Hipster Presents," which is traveling to 10 U.S. cities to showcase bohemians in their natural environments. He says the fact that hipsters have entered the mainstream is the best argument for making shows about them.
"It's too big to ignore," he said in Seedwell's SoMa offices. "You document it like you would document hip-hop or grunge. It's undeniably there. I don't think we're trying to say we've got the inside scoop. We're just saying, regardless of whether you think it's a dirty word or not, let's explore what it really is."
The documentary series features earnest portraits of young creative people discussing their passions, from music to food to nightlife. It differs sharply in tone from the channel's other shows, both comedies that poke fun at hipster culture. "Max Movie Reviews" features a foul-mouthed hipster baby, voiced by Furia in a flamboyant Austrian accent, discussing the film world with his long-suffering puppet friend Hans. "Hipster Grandmas" is a talk show in which actors playing elderly women discuss news and pop culture, trying to stay hip amid hip replacements.

Target audience -
The founders worry that their target audience may see the name "American Hipster" and avoid their shows, assuming they were created to mock them.
"I'm definitely concerned about that," said Fine, 30, who met his co-founders when they were seventh-graders in their native Seattle. "At the same time, that name begs you to come and take a look and see what's going on. My hope is when they get there, they'll see a lighthearted and fun approach."
YouTube is helping Seedwell with some promotion. But the bulk of the marketing is left to the creators.
"We are absolutely busting our asses day in and day out to try to make this thing a success," Furia said. "They're certainly helping us, but there's a lot that rides on our shoulders. ... We feel a tremendous amount of pressure to succeed."
Not everyone has welcomed their approach. Robert Lanham, author of the satirical 2003 book "The Hipster Handbook," said early clips of the shows lacked the sophistication and wit of other hipster-baiting projects, notably the IFC series "Portlandia."
"They look like people from L.A. who went to American Apparel and Urban Outfitters to buy Halloween costumes," he said. "It didn't seem very subtle or clever."
Fine says he tries not to worry too much about the way his shows - or his hipster identity - are perceived.
"Hipster or no hipster, the only sure thing is that we're all going to perish," he said. "And so we better have some fun and not care too much about what people call us."

Lance Iversen / The Chronicle
David Fine (top), Beau Lewis and Peter Furia are producing shows at their Seedwell studio in San Francisco for YouTube's American Hipster channel.


Sunday, March 25, 2012

2012-03-22 Northbay Uprising: Hitlist, Gathering of the Tribes & News


 *******HEY HIP CATS AND COOL KITTIES! ITS THURSDAY!!********
 Northbay Uprising presents.............
 Mis Demeanor's Hitlist
Featuring El Negro.!!! with Dr.G. & Dj Jazzy Jeff "Deuces" holding it down
(& Mis Demeanor will let you know who let the dogs out.)

"Drippin Wet" by Dboi (Vallejo)
"Shots Fired" by Show Banga (San Francisco)
"Pothead Anthem" by Down n'Dirty (Vallejo)

"Pockets Dont Lie" by Peezy (Martinez)
"Dollaz" by Peezy, featuring Turf Talk (Vallejo)
"Do Me Right" by Turf Talk (Vallejo)

"Sick of Living Like This" by Umoja Joshua (Vallejo)
"Get Right" by Mac Mall (Vallejo)
"Angle of the Bay" by El Negro (Vallejo)

"Tonight" by Down n'Dirty (Vallejo)
"All on a Dolla" by Spookie Sicc (San Francisco)
"Crazy" by Spookie Sicc (San Francisco)
"What was her name" by Spookie Sicc (San Francisco)

"Many Levelz" by Ras Ceylon (Oakland) with Askari X, Tajai
"Afrocentric Azian" by Ras Ceylon (Oakland)
"Africa Dream" by Talib Kweli & Hi-Tek
"Gutter Rainbow" by Talib Kweli & Hi-Tek [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IL8T_Xz-_bQ]

TUNE IN, ITS A CAN'T MISS !!!
(XOXOXOX)
4 to 5pm: Gathering of the Tribes
with Dr.G. and the Psychonauts!
San Pablo Bay culture, calender listings and more! Constantly updated. [links_09.html]
Services, Announcements and Ongoing events [services-announcements-and-ongoing.html]

We are gonna be playing alot of music this episode, and talking about naughty psychedelic stuff!

2012-03-14 "Humanity, Energy, and Oneness" by Dylan Charles [http://www.evolver.net/user/dylan_charles/blog/humanity_energy_and_oneness]

Featuring some music from -
"Sister Crayon" of Sacramento [www.myspace.com/sistercrayon]:
* "(in) Reverse" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BklxcL7li_o]
* "Souls of Gold" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aiNjLM3K1LI]
* "Stem" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCy_dHlJdPA]
"Buttercream Gang" of Napa [http://www.facebook.com/thebuttercreamgang/app_2405167945]
* I Want To Know
* Flawed
* Come Back To My Dreams
"The Fresh & Onlys" [http://www.myspace.com/thefreshonlys]
* Summer of Love

Keep it KILLER Krazy, psychonauts!!!
And look at this while you're at it: "2012 Magic Love Bus" [http://www.evolver.net/group/evolver_san_francisco_bay_area/blog/join_group_2012_magic_love_bus_journey_and_get_board_sf_la]

5 to 6pm: Northbay Uprising radio news
2012-03-21 "Lawrence Livermore Lab & the Continued Nuclear Arms Race" by Abby Martin [http://mediaroots.org/lawrence-livermore-lab-the-continued-nuclear-arms-race.php]
MEDIA ROOTS — Abby and Robbie Martin grew up in Pleasanton, CA, a city located ten miles from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), a secret nuclear weapons production facility.  They initially set out to explore the psychological impacts of taking nuclear testing into virtual space.  But as their investigation unfolded, they found that the LLNL—in conjunction with Site 300—has built an impressive greenwashing PR campaign cloaking a sinister reality.

2012-03-21 "Small Town Spies" by Emily L. [http://www.care2.com/causes/small-town-spies.html]

2012-06-02 "Ten years and $1 trillion later, what has all our security spending achieved?" from "Nieman Foundation for Journalism, Harvard Univeristy" [http://www.niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ask_this.view&askthisid=512]
[ ... ]
As we approach the 10th anniversary of 9/11, United States government expenditures on domestic homeland security have risen by $580 billion over those in place in 2001. When we add in private sector costs and opportunity costs of delays and inconveniences associated with enhanced security regulations -- but leaving out the costs of the terrorism-related wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- the increase in expenditures on domestic homeland security in the US in the decade exceeds one trillion dollars.
[ ... ]
Instead of saving lives, extravagant homeland security spending is, in a sense, costing lives. In the past month over 320 people have been killed by tornadoes in the US. Yet there are studies that show $200 million spent subsidizing the purchase of tornado shelters for mobile home owners would save 30 lives during the life of the shelters. These are guaranteed lives saved for a modest government investment. There are other examples ranging from air bags to smoke alarms to pharmaceuticals known to save many lives. Diverting even a small proportion of homeland security spending to such measures could save many lives at a fraction of the cost.

2012-03-15 "Berkeley Police Chief Meehan No-Show @ Review Commission" by Oaks4Peace [http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/15/18709361.php]
"So the information that we had... and it was all public information... was that an F The Police march.. not the peaceful Occupy folks... but the F the Police march... the folks that had busted up Oakland pretty badly... were coming to Berkeley. There were going to come walking from Oakland to Berkeley... down Telegraph to the University police department, where they were going to take over the police department." - Berkeley Police Chief Michael Meehan (March 8th, 2012 press conference, North Berkeley)
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Where did this supposition come out of? What was the process of intelligence gathering which garnered such a wrong hypothesis, and is this information available for public review? Adams reminded Harris that it is the purpose of the board to provide oversight of the police and their policies. This claim of a police station take-over is at the crux of the terrible decision to hold over officers way from aiding in public safety; instead that night's shift was told to monitor the march.

2012-03-20 "Indybay Journalists Charged with Felony: Conspiracy to Make Media" [http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/03/20/18709755.php]
Santa Cruz County District Attorney Bob Lee has embarked on a full frontal assault against independent media in Santa Cruz by including four regular contributors to the independent news website Indybay.org amongst the eleven people charged with multiple felonies and misdemeanors after the occupation of a vacant bank building on November 30th, 2011. District Attorney Lee apparently believes it is his duty to dictate how events such as the occupation of the vacant bank at 75 River Street should be reported on by the media, and if he does not approve of the coverage, then journalists risk the DA bringing charges against them.

2012-03-21 "Prisoners in solitary petition United Nations: ‘CDCR destroys our minds, souls and spirits’" by Mary Ratcliff [http://sfbayview.com/2012/prisoners-in-solitary-petition-united-nations-cdcr-destroys-our-minds-souls-and-spirits/]

More articles and events at the San Francisco Bay View newspaper's website [http://sfbayview.com/]

Worker Power: Low-Paid workers demand human rights!!!


Saturday, March 24, 2012

2012-03-24 "Spiritual Peace Walk"
Come join us and walk for peace in the neighborhoods and help end gang violence. We invite people to participate with us in prayer. We will begin the event with traditional Ohlone dancers. Invited participants will be local American Indian drummers and Mexica/Aztec drum groups too.
2012-03-24 "Third parties challenging open primary" by GUY KOVNER from "Press Democrat" newspaper
[http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20120324/ARTICLES/120329690/1010/sports?p=1&tc=pg]
Political third parties, which typically veer to the left or right of the Democrats and Republicans, don't like California's new top-two, open primary that makes its debut in the June 5 election.
The system, approved by 54 percent of state voters as Proposition 14 in 2010, replaces traditional partisan primaries in which voters in each party nominate candidates for the general election.
Instead, California voters will choose in June among all the candidates for congressional, legislative and statewide offices, and the top two vote-getters, regardless of party, will move on to a November run-off.
Backers of Proposition 14, including former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, said it would foster the election of more moderate lawmakers and ease gridlock in Sacramento.
“It cuts us out of any chance of winning,” said Pamela Elizondo of Laytonville, a veteran third-party candidate who is running for the North Coast Assembly seat this year, her ninth campaign as either a Peace and Freedom or Green Party candidate.
Elizondo, a former welfare mother who lives on Social Security benefits, said there is “no question” that the top-two primary unconstitutionally discriminates against third-party candidates.
A lawsuit filed last fall in Alameda County by seven third-party members contends that the top-two system “effectively denies voters their fundamental right of choice by precluding small party candidates from the general election ballot.”
The general election, the suit says, is “the moment when the highest number of voters are engaged in the electoral process.”
The plaintiffs' bid for a preliminary injunction to block implementation of the top-two primary has been postponed twice and now is set for April 10, said Michael Siegel, an Oakland attorney representing the party members.
Minor parties raise issues that the two major parties may avoid and “that's valuable for democracy,” Siegel said.
Only 5 percent of California's 17 million registered voters belong to a third party, while 74 percent are Democrats or Republicans and 21 percent are independents.
Andy Merrifield, a Sonoma State University political science professor, said the suit's premise is valid.
“The chances of a third party ever getting to be in the top two gets down to nil,” he said.
It doesn't matter that third-party candidates have rarely won in general elections, Merrifield said. The parties exist “not necessarily to win but to have some say in the campaign,” he said.
A Democratic candidate, for example, might move further left to appeal to Green Party voters, Merrifield said.
Attorney General Kamala Harris, defending Proposition 14, said in court papers that California's new system “provides sufficient access to the general election by allowing all qualified candidates to compete in the primary election.”
“Nothing requires California to alter its election system to promote the interests of small parties,” Harris asserted.
The lawsuit names California Secretary of State Debra Bowen as defendant.
Shannan Velayas, a Bowen spokeswoman, said the office does not comment on pending litigation.
Those suing also include the statewide Libertarian and Peace and Freedom parties and the Green Party of Alameda County.

Friday, March 23, 2012

2012-03-23 "Report gives C's, D's to schools in educating poor, minority students" by Sharon Noguchi, Theresa Harrington, Katy Murphy and Jason Sweeney
[http://www.mercurynews.com/central-coast/ci_20234203/report-gives-cs-ds-schools-educating-poor-minority]
Bay Area school districts barely get passing grades for how well they teach minority and low-income students, according to a report released by an education advocacy group Thursday.
Of the 147 unified school districts statewide that were ranked, Palo Alto Unified scored next to last, earning a grade-point average of 1.0 -- a D. The report did not award any A's.
Palo Alto's low grade was one of many startling findings in the 2011 California District Report Cards put out by the Oakland-based Education Trust-West. The second-annual report evaluated seven criteria for how well districts are educating poor, African-American and Latino students. For the sake of making accurate comparisons, the report focused only on about 15 percent of school districts in the state, those that serve kindergarten through 12th grades.
There has been no significant improvement since the first report was issued in April 2011 in the Bay Area. The biggest gain was West Contra Costa, which moved from an F to a D. While the state made closing the achievement gap a top priority, budget cuts have derailed many strategies -- from summer and Saturday school to tutoring to small class sizes -- to help accomplish that.
Among the latest report's findings:
* In the Bay Area, San Ramon Valley scored the highest, a C-plus.
 Besides San Ramon, only Castro Valley, Gilroy and South San Francisco scored at least a C, all slightly better than Los Angeles Unified.
* More Bay Area districts scored a D than any other grade. Seven earned a D-plus.
* Only one in four Latino and black students graduates eligible to enter the University of California or California State University.
* Lake Elsinore in Riverside County earned the highest score in the state, a B-plus; San Juan in Sacramento County earned the lowest, a D-minus.
"The report confirms what we know to be true: Too many kids aren't being served by our current system," said Erica Wood, vice-president of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, which invests in trying to narrow the achievement gap.
Ed Trust's grades equally weigh black and Latino students' achievement, score improvement over five years, the achievement gap with white students; and the percentage graduating "college ready," meaning passing all the prerequisites for the University of California with a C or better.
Overall, Southern California schools outscored Bay Area districts, a reversal for Northern Californians accustomed to scoring at the top in school tests and competitions. The report points out an embarrassing weakness.
"We got the highest grade of any district in the county, but it's still a C-plus, and there are gaps," said San Ramon schools Superintendent Steven Enoch. "We are aware of the achievement gap and take it very seriously."
Oakland has the widest achievement gap between white and Latino students, district spokesman Troy Flint noted. "There's no excuse. We just have to get better." The district did significantly improve in one area over the previous year: 52 percent of Latino graduates were eligible for a state university, up 10 percentage points.
In general, Flint said, "We have some of the highest-scoring white students in the state, so our numbers are going to look different than in districts that have a large working-class white population."
But Carrie Hahnel, Ed Trust-West's director of policy and research, wasn't buying it. "If you're able to achieve high scores for some students, why are you not able to achieve high scores for all students?" she asked.
Fremont Unified, whose schools often top state tests, moved from a D in the previous year to a D-plus in Ed Trust's recent report. Superintendent Jim Morris said he wasn't sure what accounted for the gain.
The district is taking various measures to boost achievement among minorities, he said. "We need to be doing a better job educating parents about standards and communicating with schools."
Palo Alto's low ranking came as disappointing but not surprising news to groups that have been pressuring the district to improve teaching for all students.
"No, I'm not happy about my district's rating," said Lucas Brooks, vice president of the Student Equity Action Network. "This gives us something to take as evidence that we really need to make a change."
Brooks, a senior at Palo Alto High, said he hopes the school board in May will raise graduation standards by requiring all students to meet UC-entrance requirements.
The district has been reluctant to address how to educate students not in accelerated tracks, said Ken Dauber, a Palo Alto parent and member of the group We Can Do Better Palo Alto. But it's useful to have a respected outside organization calling attention to the achievement gap in the district, he said.
"Embarrassment is often a good impetus for change," said Dauber, a Google software engineer and former sociologist.
School board President Melissa Baten-Caswell acknowledged the need for change. "We need to teach differently. Just doing the same thing over and over isn't going to change things."

Ed Trust West's 2011 District Report Cards*
C-plus: San Ramon Valley
C: Castro Valley, Gilroy, South San Francisco
C-minus: Pleasanton, Livermore Valley, San Lorenzo, San Leandro
D-plus: Milpitas, San Jose, Santa Clara, Pajaro Valley, Berkeley, Fremont Unified, New Haven
D: Hayward, Oakland, West Contra Costa, Alameda, Antioch, Morgan Hill, Mount Diablo, Palo Alto
* Includes only K-12 districts of 5,000 students or more