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DESCRIPTION:Because hundreds of you collected over 30,000 signatures ... we will CLAIM 
 THE VICTORY today, the deadline for submitting the referendum petitions to 
 stop San Francisco City Hall from redeveloping and "repeopling" (the 
 Redevelopment Agency's term) Bayview Hunters Point, a predominantly Black 
 neighborhood that's 91% people of color.\n\nJoin us on the steps of City 
 Hall at 1:15 today, Wednesday, Aug. 30, for a rally and press conference. 
 Come celebrate our power!\n\nWillie Ratcliff said all along that this 
 petition drive was not just to stop the Redevelopment Plan but to 
 demonstrate Black Power and win some respect at City Hall, which thinks 
 nothing of sweeping us out the door of San Francisco like dirt. Our 
 brothers and sisters in New Orleans are demanding the right to return, and 
 Blacks in every city must demand the right to live - and thrive and 
 determine our own destiny - in neighborhoods where we have put down roots 
 for generations. No more land grabs! No more ethnic cleansing!\n\nAs a 
 small sign of success in our quest for respect, here is today's top 
 editorial from the San Francisco Chronicle:\n\n    To rebuild a 
 neighborhood\n    -\n    Wednesday, August 30, 2006\n\n    WILLIE RATCLIFF 
 and Brian Murphy O'Flynn are unlikely candidates to pose as the saviors of 
 the Bayview-Hunters Point area. Architectural designer O'Flynn doesn't even 
 live in the neighborhood, and Ratcliff, publisher of the struggling Bay 
 View newspaper, is known as a radical who never saw a lost cause he didn't 
 like. But as the lead organizers of a campaign to call for a voter 
 referendum on the Redevelopment Agency's plan to begin improvement work on 
 1,300 acres in Bayview-Hunters Point, Ratcliff and O'Flynn have created a 
 real threat to the city's plans. Today is the signature-gathering deadline 
 for their petition, a deadline they expect to meet, and, in November 2007, 
 San Francisco voters may well choose to side with them.\n\n    Their war 
 against City Hall is not altogether fair. The ghost of the Redevelopment 
 Agency of yore, the agency that destroyed the Fillmore District and 
 bulldozed thousands of single-room occupancy units in the South of Market 
 area, has disappeared. In its place is a Redevelopment Agency that 
 developed the Bayview-Hunters Point plan over the course of 10 years and 
 some 600 community meetings -- without the active participation of the 
 people who are now trying to shoot down the project.\n\n    Though they 
 denounce the Redevelopment Agency's plans as a "takeover" and a sop to big 
 developers, Ratcliff and O'Flynn have no detailed alternatives of their own 
 to help these fraught neighborhoods. They're aiming at the wrong target -- 
 but because the city has neglected the area for so long, there's little 
 else to aim at.\n\n    In May, the Board of Supervisors passed the massive 
 redevelopment plan, which includes an increase of approximately 3,790 
 housing units, a $60 million-plus economic development proposal and a $30 
 million-plus beautification program. "Just in terms of the amount of money 
 it's going to make available to the neighborhood, it knocks everything else 
 out of the box," said Supervisor Sophie Maxwell, a supporter of the 
 redevelopment whose district includes the affected area. "This community 
 has been making these plans for 30 years."\n\n    Apparently, some people 
 still feel left out, or don't believe that the Redevelopment Agency will be 
 responsive to their needs. The petitioners have picked an excellent target 
 in the agency -- it has a sorry history, and universal hatred of eminent 
 domain is an additional rallying point in an area with high homeownership 
 rates. "A zebra never changes its stripes, and neither does the 
 redevelopment agency," said Ratcliff.\n\n    But we'd argue that the agency 
 -- whose Bayview-Hunters Point plan does not authorize the use of eminent 
 domain for residential property -- recognizes its own history and is loath 
 to make similar mistakes. "The whole business about the old days, that's 
 just crap," said Buck Bagot, who has served both as an anti-redevelopment 
 activist and past president of the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency 
 Commission. "We won a lot of fights with redevelopment. There's not much 
 they can do anymore."\n\n    What redevelopment can -- and will -- still 
 do, however, is speed up a continuing gentrification process. That's what 
 this petition is really about -- a battle about why the city has officially 
 disregarded Bayview-Hunters Point, and the residents' anger is justified. 
 The city's first redevelopment zone in Bayview-Hunters Point didn't do much 
 for the residents; how will a new one be any different? The neighborhoods 
 are still regarded as an extralegal zone in the city, an area where 
 terrible crimes can be permitted every day with little fear of prosecution. 
 The fact that five murders occurred in San Francisco's southeastern 
 neighborhoods on a single night this week should be met with mass outrage, 
 but it hasn't been -- and we're willing to bet that many of them will go 
 unsolved.\n\n    This inattention extends to matters of employment and 
 housing, although those problems can't be solved by the city alone. The 
 federal government has abandoned its commitment to affordable housing, and 
 employment is a problem that transcends government answers. But it would 
 serve those Bay Area residents, who believe that the Bayview's poverty is 
 self-inflicted, to recall that the neighborhood once enjoyed high 
 employment and a high-quality of life thanks to the proximity of a thriving 
 shipyard that offered blue-collar workers a dignified living. Those kinds 
 of jobs are hard to find in America these days, and as more and more jobs 
 disappear to globalization and technology, the challenges of the Bayview 
 may come to look more familiar to us all.\n\n    Critics would argue that 
 simply allowing the composition of the neighborhood to change, as it will 
 under redevelopment, will eventually take care of these issues. But that's 
 an unduly risky and hard-hearted approach for a city that likes to prides 
 itself on the vibrancy of its diverse neighborhoods.\n\n    This one is 
 calling out for the attention and respect it deserves.\n\n    Page B - 8\n  
   URL: 
 http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2006/08/30/EDGMEKRANR1.DTL 
 \n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/08/30/18304652.php
SUMMARY:Petition drive succeeds! Rally today
LOCATION:\nJoin us on the steps of City Hall at 1:15 today, Wednesday, Aug. 30, for 
 a rally and press conference. 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/08/30/18304652.php
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