Tuesday May 7 Membership Meeting: Ensuring Food Security across the Food Chain in San Francisco

Co-hosted by the South Beach District 6 Democratic Club

For our May meeting, we’ll be discussing issue of food insecurity and hunger in Potrero Hill and beyond. We’ll hear from organizations addressing this problem in our neighborhoods and learn how we can all be involved in solutions.

Panelists include:

We will also hear from David Schmidt of Secure the Vote about publicly-owned, Open-Source paper ballot voting systems. Club members may vote on endorsing AB 1784, the state bill to fund pilot systems in SF and LA. Click here for the fact sheet.

Date: Tuesday, May 7
Time: 7 pm
Location: Potrero Hill Neighborhood House at 953 DeHaro St

Tues Nov 7th:

Dan Bernal, Congressional Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi‘s SF Chief of Staff, will discuss and answer your questions about  the insanity of the past year on Capitol Hill. 

Closer to home, familiar ally Jon Golinger will discuss and read from his new book: Saving San Francisco’s Heart: How to win elections, reclaim our city, and keep SF a special place.

Also: PHDC’s Executive Committee voted to support the San Francisco Living Wage Coalition‘s efforts to win pay increases for 25,000 low-wage workers in San Francisco, and will bring it to the membership for ratification. 

WHEN: Tuesday, November 7, 7pm
WHERE: Potrero Hill Neighborhood House, 953 De Haro @ Southern Hts

Tuesday, March 1st: Homelessness in San Francisco

Screen Shot 2016-03-09 at 12.16.24 PMWe’ve heard about the problems. We’ve seen the problems. At this meeting, the conversation was about SOLUTIONS – real, imagined; happening, never tried; possible, impossible; short-term, long-term; direct action, legislation; good, perfect…

The amazing panel consisted of (left to right in photo above):

PHDC Vice-President Tony Kelly moderated. The program opened with Melodie, reading a letter she had written about some of the trauma she and her fellow vehicle dwellers have experienced.

In addition to their own organizations, panelists recommended some resources to find out more and get involved. In San Francisco: HandUp online fundraising to help an individual in need; volunteering with Project Homeless Connect at events offering many services under one roof; Downtown Streets team. Also: Dignity Village in Portland, OR.

* Amy Weiss requests that you take the online quiz/survey to test your knowledge about the status quo of homelessness in SF and learn more about the Saint Francis Homelessness Challenge. Thanks.

WHEN: Tuesday, March 1, at 7pm
WHERE: Potrero Hill Neighborhood House, 953 De Haro St @ Southern Heights

July 7th Black Lives Matter: the panel

BLMpanelistsFantastic panel, thought-provoking discussion. See some photos on our Facebook page.  Below are bios of the panel, which include contact info for organizations they are affiliated with. At the bottom of this post,please find links to further reading, recommended by participants.

RHEEMA CALLOWAYRheema Calloway
San Francisco-born, raised in the Ingleside district and Bayview/Hunters Point, Rheema is Black Priorities Project Organizer for Causa Justa::Just Cause. She began advocating for her community at age 13, working as a sexual awareness advocate, and while still a teen led the Bayview nonviolence-promoting dance team Supasickwidit. Rheema was then honored by then-Mayor Gavin Newsom with the “Delivering the Message” Award. While earning her BBA in Management at Texas Southern University, Rheema founded the California Club to ensure that CA students, the largest recruited community on campus, received benefits and support equal to those of in-state students. Her personal experiences and education have strengthened her commitment to educate community members as well as to address social and economic issues. Rheema is the co-founder of the women’s empowerment clothing line Supreme Queen SF as well as the women’s support group Conscious Queens. In the future Rheema sees herself running her own non-profit.

Stevon Cook
STEVON COOK
Stevon Cook is a 3rd generation San Franciscan and graduate of Thurgood Marshall High School in Bayview Hunters point. After graduating from Williams College, Stevon returned to San Francisco to join the Mayor’s City Hall Fellows program. He has spent his career focused on education equity and policy issues. Today, Stevon is the CEO of Mission Bit, an education nonprofit that uses computer science courses as a way to empower high school youth that attend public schools and create jobs for San Franciscans most affected by income inequality. Stevon serves on the board of directors for San Francisco Achievers and writes for the Huffington Post.Joe Marshall

JOE MARSHALL
Dr. Joseph E. Marshall, Jr. is an author, lecturer, radio talk show host, community activist, and a member of the San Francisco Police Commission. He is the founder of Alive & Free (originally Omega Boys Club), an international violence prevention organization headquartered in Dogpatch. Alive & Free has transformed the lives of more than 10,000 young people and produced 200 college graduates, all supported by the organization’s scholarship fund. Another 52 members are currently enrolled in college, and nearly 50 have gone on to earn graduate degrees. Dr. Marshall is the host of the violence prevention radio talk show “Street Soldiers,” and the subject of the PBS documentary of the same name. He authored the 1996 best-selling book, Street Soldier: One Man’s Struggle to Save a Generation, One Life at a Time. Dr. Marshall’s innovation has earned him the MacArthur Genius Award, the Children’s Defense Fund Leadership Award, the Essence Award, and the Use Your Life Award from Oprah Winfrey.

Thea Matthews
THEA MATTHEWS
Thea Matthews is a 2nd generation San Francisco native who recently graduated from City College of San Francisco and will be attending UC Berkeley in the fall. She is a poet, student, activist, and an artivist curator. She helped lead the revival of CCSF’s Black Student Union and has actively participated in the Black Lives Matter movement. She helped organize political demonstrations, such as Millions March SF, Queers come out for #Black Lives Matter, the SF Black Lives Matter Community Building Symposium, and currently is curating a literary event honoring Black Lives and the social climate today. She continuously strives for ways to individually and collectively heal from the historical, as well as intergenerational, trauma oppressed communities have been inflicted with.

 

Vanessa Moses VANESSA MOSES
Vanessa’s East Coast roots involved several years of leadership development and anti-oppression work with youth in Philadelphia. Once in the Bay Area, she became active with several community and political organizations, including as staff for Bay Area Police Watch, a project of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and as a collective member with the Center for Political Education. She received a bachelors degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and was later trained as an organizer at the National School for Strategic Organizing with the Labor/Community Strategy Center and Bus Riders Union in Los Angeles. Both before & during her current work as Program Co-Director of Causa Justa::Just Cause, Vanessa also worked for 8 years with generationFIVE to help build and evolve transformative justice practices and collaboratives. Vanessa and Rheema both are members of the Black Friday 14, arrested when they led a group to shut down West Oakland BART, and urge you to sign the petition to drop charges against them.

Maxine Anderson

 

MAXINE ANDERSON (Moderator)
Maxine was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, and earned a BA in History from the University of Illinois, Champaign/Urbana. After graduation she worked in the insurance industry in the Chicago area before transferring to San Francisco. She continued to work in the industry until she had the opportunity to help develop and manage the claims function in the City Attorney’s Office of the City of Oakland. She then worked for the City of San Francisco in the City Attorney’s Office, a job from which she has recently retired. Maxine became actively involved with the League of Women Voters in 2003, setting up candidate forums and being a speaker with the League’s Speakers Bureau; she now serves as Advocacy Co-Chair. She also participated in the creation of another nonpartisan organization, San Francisco for Democracy, where she has been a longtime board member.

WHEN: Tuesday, July 7, at 7pm
WHERE: Potrero Hill Neighborhood House, 953 De Haro St @ Southern Hts

References, for further reading after the Black Lives Matter discussion

1. The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, by Michelle Alexander.

2. Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black People in America from the Civil War to World War II, by Douglas A. Blackmon.

3. “San Francisco Justice Reinvestment Initiative:  Racial & Ethnic Disparities Analysis for the Reentry Council.”   W. Haywood Burns Institute for Juvenile Justice, Fairness & Equity.

4. “Deadly Force: Police use of Lethal Force in the United States,” Amnesty International report

5. “The Counted,” people killed by police in the U.S. this year, compiled by The Guardian.

Tuesday, May 5th: Calle 24; End-of-Life Option Act; Medicare’s 50th birthday

Erick Arguello, Edwin LindoCalle 24, the stretch of 24th Street running from Mission Street to Potrero Avenue, is known as “El Corazón de la Misión”, or “The Heart of the Mission.” Calle 24 is also the name of the group of merchants and neighbors fighting for the heart and soul of the Mission. Erick Arguello and Edwin Lindo (right) described the widespread displacement of long-time residents & businesses by skyrocketing rents, and legislation introduced by Supervisor Campos earlier that day to place a 45-day moratorium on market-rate housing in the Mission. The club voted to endorse the “No Monster in the Mission” campaign, thereby joining the Plaza 16 Coalition.

Jacie RoweSB 128 is the End-of-Life Option Act (Wolk, D-Davis, and Monning, D-Carmel), which would allow terminally ill Californians to request medication to bring about a peaceful death if their suffering becomes unbearable. Jacie Rowe (left), Northern California organizer for Compassion & Choices, discussed the bill. The club passed a resolution of support and will sign on to a letter to legislators.


There are plans afoot for preserving and expanding Medicare, America’s universal, public health plan for seniors age 65 and up, and actions to celebrate its birthday this summer. Jonathan Meade from SEIU 1021, part of Healthy California, a coalition of which PHDC is a member, invited PHDC to join the July 30th rally in Oakland.

 

WHEN: Tuesday, May 5th at 7pm
WHERE: Potrero Hill Neighborhood House, 953 De Haro St @ Southern Heights