Occupy Oakland clergy and supporters protest beach umbrella citation
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Originally published on Oakland North
“Everyone has to sign in first.”
As 20 protesters filed into City Hall, umbrellas open, the security guard at the front desk kindly asked that everyone sign in and obtain a visitor sticker before going upstairs. Everyone followed suit, filing into an orderly line, signing their name and collecting a sticker. Unlike most Occupy Oakland events, this one was rather cordial in tone.
Following a confrontation with police last Thursday at Frank Ogawa Plaza after being denied a permit for a canopy, Occupy Oakland protesters and local clergy members who had organized the Interfaith Tent at the former Occupy camp site had called for an “umbrella action” during which they would confront City Administrator Deanna Santana—in song and dance—about recent events.Their grievances were twofold: They wanted an explanation about why they were denied a canopy permit, as well as one for why their replacement — a beach umbrella — was being considered a “structure” by city officials.
Police shut down floating Aquapy encampment on Lake Merritt
Originally published on Oakland North
Oakland police late Thursday night confiscated the SS Don’t Let the Banks Punk You Out, a raft launched onto Lake Merritt less than a week ago in order to advertise for the West Coast port shutdown and Occupy the lake — or Aquapy it, rather.
During the late evening raid, three occupiers sailing on the 10-foot-long vessel were detained briefly and then released. At least one occupier, who gave his name as Jeff Boffo, of Oakland, was ticketed for not having a boat permit. ”[OPD] equated it to getting a speeding ticket,” he said after his release from custody.
Occupy SF Dismantled by Police Overnight
Originally published on the Mission Loc@l
After a tense standoff with protesters at the Occupy SF encampment on Justin Herman Plaza, city officials dismantled the camp early this morning, transforming the six-week-old tent city housing hundreds of people back to its original state in a matter of hours.
Mission Turnout on Low End, Sunset Votes Most
Originally published on the Mission Loc@l
Darker areas represent higher turnout. Click here for a larger map.
Like the rest of the city, Missionites turned out in below-average numbers to vote for mayor.
District residents who did vote overwhelmingly supported District 11 Supervisor John Avalos.
Election officials said this year’s race had the lowest turnout of the last 10 mayoral contests. Only 39 percent of all registered voters — 182,317 residents — cast a ballot. The Mission ranked sixth lowest in turnout (30.4 percent), beating only the Western Addition, Visitacion Valley, Civic Center, SoMa and Bayview.
Ed Lee Wins Mayor, Avalos Dominates Mission
Originally published on the Mission Loc@l
In a rather quick turn of events, interim Mayor Ed Lee is looking like the winner in the San Francisco mayoral race after 11 rounds of ranked-choice vote distributions.
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How Much Did Each Vote Cost Yesterday?
Originally published on the Mission Loc@l
If the San Francisco mayoral race was a business investment, where the return for money spent was votes earned, then a number of candidates clearly would be heading into bankruptcy.
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Avalos Leading in Mission Money Raised
Originally published on the View the full map here.
Tomorrow, tens of thousands of San Francisco voters will cast their votes for the city’s mayor, sheriff and district attorney. After months of fundraising by mayoral candidates in the city, it’s clear that there are power blocs, both geographic and demographic, that are throwing their financial weight behind their person of choice.
The map above shows how much money each candidate raised from different parts of the city. Play around with it and see where the money, and power, is coming from for each candidate. The data is current to October 25.
And if you want to compare the current numbers to last month’s, check out our previous map.
Mission Residents Mull Breaking with Banks
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Originally published on Mission Local
Naomi was a loyal Wells Fargo customers for 13 years. But after she and her husband, Michael, were turned down for a loan to help fund an adoption, Naomi transfered 90 percent of her cash to the San Mateo Credit Union. Michael split his cash between three small banks and Wells Fargo.
“I was seeing red,” Naomi said. “Then we went to a credit union, and they were like, ‘No worries, here’s the loan.’”
Anger at Wall Street and large banking institutions has culminated in nationwide occupations and calls for people to divest from banks by Nov. 5. “Bank Transfer Day” boasts 83,000 supporters on its Facebook event page, and hundreds of thousands of new credit union accounts have been opened nationwide this month. Like Naomi and Michael, many Mission residents say they support credit unions and small banks. But when it comes to actually making the switch, most are worried about the logistics.
City Happy with Progress on Occupy SF Camp
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Originally published on Mission Local
The flannel and V-neck T-shirts of SF Occupiers met the crisp sports jackets and polished dress shoes of city officials in an hour-long meeting Tuesday afternoon that ended with Mayor Ed Lee reassuring the occupiers that “We don’t contemplate needing police action if we are working on addressing these issues.”
Lee also told the occupiers that if they join Wednesday’s general strike in Oakland, their camp in San Francisco won’t be raided.
“I assure you of that,” he said.
For the second time in one week, Lee presided over a meeting of 45 occupiers, labor and community leaders, and city department heads and staffers to address the city within a city that is the Occupy SF camp. Porta-potties, a dead lawn, open flames and health issues were all on the meeting agenda. The future of the six-week encampment at Justin Herman Plaza was the ever-present subtext.
The tense portion of the meeting came as occupiers and their allies pushed Lee for public assurance that the camp won’t be raided by police.
“For the record, Mayor Lee, it would be helpful to come out of this meeting with a joint statement,” said Shaw San Liu, an organizer with the Chinese Progressive Association.
“Again, I need to speak in my own words,” Lee said. “There would be no doubt if things broke down, everyone in this room would know.”
“Of course you can use your own words,” San Liu said, “but [the occupiers] want a recognition that they have a right to exist.”
“We don’t contemplate needing police action if we are working on addressing these issues,” Lee said.
Since Occupy SF first formed on September 17, police have twice raided their camps, resulting in at least 16 arrests. A raid planned for last Wednesday was likely called off after a number of supervisors, including John Avalos and Jane Kim, and other prominent figures joined the campers.
Like the first meeting late last week, Tuesday’s discussions centered around figuring out how the camp can safely exist in the long term without quashing the occupiers’ constitutional rights.
Largely as a result of the political backlash that has engulfed Oakland Mayor Jean Quan after last Tuesday’s police confrontations in that city transformed the downtown area into a war zone of tear gas and rubber bullets, a number of San Francisco supervisors and city officials see diplomacy as a more effective way of dealing with Occupy SF.
After a brief round of introductions, Philip Oje, a spokesman for the occupiers, described how they had addressed several of the city’s health concerns: porta-potties will be serviced daily, a team of people will regularly clean up the camp, the bocce ball court has been cleared and the kitchen’s health standards won a seal of approval from the Department of Public Health — five stars, as Oje put it.
“Five stars?” asked a man in the room, surprised.
“Yeah,” Oje replied, and everyone laughed.
“That’s the first level of cooperation I want to recognize,” Lee later said. He then asked department heads to run down a laundry list of objectives.
Mohammed Nuru, the interim director of the Department of Public Works, went first. He described how Recology will come twice a day to pick up garbage and recycling. He praised the occupiers for setting up regular porta-potty cleanups, but also cautioned against using trees to tether the tarps covering many of the camp’s facilities, including the kitchen.
“Have you seen our new kitchen?” an occupier asked.
“Yes,” Nuru replied.
“Though I hear it’s tough to get a reservation,” joked Phil Ginsberg, head of the Recreation and Park Department.
Ginsberg picked it up from there. “Our biggest concern is the lawn. It’s dead.”
Once the winter rains begin, he added, the lawn will become a muddy mess, and it will likely be difficult for campers to stay there.
The months of wet weather ahead will do much to complicate things for the encampment. Parts of the plaza could flood, and without an endorsement from the city on the use of tents, health issues could mount.
Someone at the camp was found to have scabies, according to Barbara Garcia, head of the Department of Public Health. Scabies are tiny parasitic creatures, like bedbugs or fleas, that are highly contagious but easy to remedy. No matter if the person was an occupier, Garcia said — such infestations can be disastrous. The health department is using guidelines for international refugee camps, she said.
“Those kinds of issues, if that happened to an occupier, needs to be addressed right away.”
Fire Chief Joanne Reyes-White said she was concerned about the use of open flames at the site. Occupiers mostly have refrained from doing so, but occasionally someone has used a candle for light.
The fire chief added that emergency services had picked up a woman with a stab wound to the abdomen at the camp’s medical tent at around 3:45 this morning. Although it’s unlikely that she was stabbed at the camp, Reyes-White warned that as numbers there grow, it will pose more of a safety risk.
“I’m the one who made the call,” said Carl, who was at the medical tent that night. He added that the woman was stabbed in the Tenderloin 30 minutes before arriving at the camp.
Occupiers brought up a video that has been circulating on the Internet, showing two Oakland police officers who infiltrated Occupy Oakland. They were concerned that SFPD might engage in similar tactics.
“That’s pretty sinister,” Lee said. “There’s no reason we need to infiltrate your camp.”
At the end of the hour-long meeting, each party committed to keeping negotiations moving forward. The occupiers will take what was discussed back to the General Assembly to see where their members want to go from here, and the city will continue working with the occupiers to find solutions to their concerns.
Game Time: Test Your Mayoral Race IQ
Originally published on Mission Local
Think you’ve got what it takes to name all — well, most — of the candidates running for the coveted mayor’s seat this November?
If you’re ready to test your San Francisco political trivia knowledge, give the game above a try. Share your score in the comments thread below!