Sunday, August 27, 2017

Saturday Night with the Alameda Progressives

Illustration by Gillain Dreher for the Alameda Magazine Article about our progressive island
    There are times when you learn so much by keeping your smartphone in your pocket!  Happened to me two weeks ago, at the vet, waiting my turn to pick up Clark's thyroid medication.  Rifling through the stack of mags intended to placate antsy pet owners, the cover of Alameda Magazine caught my eye with the teaser "No longer a political island."  Inside was an article by Steve Tavares about the new political complexion of my hometown. Our city council was the first in the Bay Area to call for Trump's impeachment, beating Berkeley to the punch.  Trump received only 13% of the 2016 vote, vs. 78% for Clinton.  And there has been a 4-1 majority on the council for progressive issues, including declaring Alameda a sanctuary city for the undocumented.

    Bernie Sanders' campaign was a catalyst for the island's leftward momentum, and the article mentions a group of "Berniecrats" called Alameda Progressives.  This led to a Google query, and in short order I had an invitation to party with the APs, on the evening of Saturday August 19, in a backyard on the west side.  Wouldn't miss it.

    The article had said an influx of young people was part of the reason for Alameda's move left, but many of the people at the party seemed to be '60s veterans like me.  A guy named me that he goes to Camp Winnarainbow every year, run by the iconic Wavy Gravy.  The hostess, an age-mate named Ruth, told me that the group has been holding a vigil at Park and Santa Clara, every Saturday between noon and 1 since inauguration day.  There was a large people earlier that day, seventy-five came to express their solidarity with Charlottesville.  Ruth said the best part was the opportunity to have unscripted interactions with onlookers.

    She's often heard people say "All lives matter," responding to the Black Lives Matter theme, and the comeback of one of the AP stalwarts is "If that were true I would not need to be here."  Would "especially yours and mine" work too? Marginalized whites were are the bedrock of Trump's support, and in my opinion progressives need to empathize.


Pamela Price, candidate for Alameda County DA
Ruth is the woman with the dog
    The gathering was addressed by Pamela Price, candidate for Alameda DA in the June 2018 election.  She is opposed to the death penalty and mass incarceration, and is trying to raise the 500K required to run a credible campaign.  She has my qualified support, and when we chatted about the devastating drug epidemic, she said that the alternatives to incarceration she promotes would be more effective than jail in helping addicts get clean.  Hope that's true — for many parents, Santa Rita is the rescue of last resort when their children are on a hard-drug death spiral.  In any event, I hope future flyers will emphasize both safer and drug-free communities.


Sharon Golden, Alameda Cannabis Community


   Sharon Golden (sharongolden3@gmail.com) of the AICC (Alameda Island Cannabis Community) was another noteworthy presence at the party.  One of the youth contingent, she wants to bring the cannabis industry to Alameda, the right way.  She explained why the industry belongs on the island — we're losing out on tax revenue, and creating bridge and tunnel traffic by forcing residents to drive to Oakland?  But she also wants including provisions in the licensing agreement that mandate local hires, and a $17 per hour minimum wage.

    As for me, my progressive dream is that low-lying Alameda, one of the communities that will be impacted first by sea-level rise, set an example in determined and creative responses to climate change.  An interactive map released just this month by the UCS (Union of Concerned Scientist) shows the island can expect by 2060/2080/2100 under moderate and severe sea-level rise projections. Choose the Chronic Inundation Area or Communities at Risk tab, drag and click on the right panel until you get a search box (can be at bit frustrating), and then enter Alameda CA as the place to look for.  Under the moderate projections, 10 to 25% of Alameda will be chronically inundated by 2080; by 2100, 25 to 50%.  (See also the San Jose Mercury article about the map.)  

    What is to be done?  As a cyclist, I would dearly love to see Alameda become bike friendlier.  Our big problem on that score is that there is only one bike path through the tunnel, and it's dirty and narrow; and the bike route across the Fruitvale Bridge to BART is dangerous and hard on times.  In the long run, the solution is to bring BART to the island. But that will take decades, and surely interim measures are possible.

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