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SEQUENCE:18904205
CREATED:20151025T002600Z
DESCRIPTION:THIS IS GOTV Weekend, Get Out the Vote, and PLEASE VOTE. For tenants who 
 depend on rent control, it is barricades time to save our homes because if 
 Prop F fails, all rented apartments will become hotels and we will all be 
 homeless.  You can vote the last 4 days of this election, October 31-Nov 3, 
 at City Hall, Basement Room 48, on a vote-by-mail (absentee) ballot Oct 
 31-Nov 2 and a regular ballot on election day, Nov 3.  On Oct 31-Nov 1, you 
 can vote 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., entering on the Grove St side, near Polk. 
 \n\nIn Supervisorial District 3 (Nob Hill, Russian Hill and Telegraph 
 Hill), the San Francisco Police Officers Association is walking precincts, 
 distributing door hangers for anti-rent control supervisorial candidate 
 Julie Christensen. \n\nThe entire ballot is dominated by the housing crisis 
 more fully described below.\nVote Yes on A,B,F, H, I,K.\nVote No on 
 C,D,E,G,J\n\nAs a protest, vote Green for mayor, Francisco Herrera.  See 
 http://www.peoplescampaign.net/platform\nhttp://www.peoplescampaign.net/\n\nYou 
 can also vote-by-mail on an absentee ballot at City Hall, outside Room 
 48:\n1. Monday through Friday, Oct 5-Nov 2 (closed for Columbus Genocide 
 Day Oct 12), 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.\n2. Saturday & Sunday Oct 24-25 and Oct 
 31-Nov 1, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (enter on Grove St near Polk).\n\nOn election 
 day, you can either vote at your polling place or at City Hall, by Room 48, 
 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.  You can deliver your vote-by-mail ballot on election day 
 to any polling place or to the County Registrar before 8 p.m.  IT MUST BE 
 RECEIVED by the County Registrar on election day; mailing is not sufficient 
 on election day AND IT IS TOO LATE TO MAIL THE BALLOT AFTER OCT 28, 2015. 
 To be safe, walk it to City Hall when the Registrar is open or to a polling 
 place on election day.\n\nThe San Francisco Elections Department provides a 
 lot of information online, including your polling place at 
 http://www.sfgov2.org/index.aspx?page=599\n\nSome comments on the 
 propositions.  The housing crisis epitomizes the bankruptcy of capitalism 
 that puts profits before people.  It should be illegal to maximize profits 
 with housing; all housing should be non-profit and no speculation should be 
 allowed.  This is only possible in a socialist society, which we can only 
 obtain when labor has the strength to carry out a general strike to put an 
 end to capitalism.  Some 75% of San Francisco residents now cannot afford 
 to buy or rent housing at current market rates.  Since all rich people have 
 at least 1 home, and often more, there is NO NEED FOR ANY LUXURY HOUSING 
 WHATSOEVER.  \n\nProposition A:   Yes. A bond that the sponsors state will 
 not cost more in taxes so the landlords cannot ask the tenants to pay for 
 it and will not pay for luxury housing.  The best thing about this bond is 
 that it makes possible federal funding in addition to bond funding for 
 workingclass housing, for those of us who cannot afford to pay more than 
 $1,000 a month and for those who cannot afford to pay more than $500 a 
 month.  All of the ballot arguments for all of the housing propositions 
 ignore one of the largest, if not the largest sector of the labor force in 
 San Francisco:  OFFICE WORKERS.  There are literally tens of thousands of 
 offices in San Francisco where secretaries, word processors, bookkeepers, 
 receptionists, mail clerks, janitors, stationary engineers and computer 
 technicians work who cannot afford so-called “market rate” rental 
 housing and certainly cannot afford to buy a home.  The same is true for 
 all restaurant and hotel workers, teachers, nurses and all other medical 
 staff who earn less than medical doctors.  This is the overwhelming 
 majority of the labor force in San Francisco.  If you make less than 
 $120,000 a year, you do not need and cannot afford to buy a tax shelter 
 called a home in San Francisco.\n\nProposition B:  Yes. Paid parental leave 
 for all City employees.  This basic labor benefit is common in most of the 
 industrialized world, but not in the backward USA.\n\nProposition C:  No. 
 This is phony ethics reform that stifles organizing against the Democratic 
 Party machine.\n\nProposition D:  No. This Mission Rock racket is luxury 
 housing near the baseball stadium swindle with funding from the 
 multi-millionaire dollar fixed gambling racket business called the SF 
 Giants baseball team and proposes promoting a brewery as industry.  Alcohol 
 is poison; ask your doctor.  \n\nProposition E:  No. This phony change to 
 the open government law is a means of packing public comment by anti-labor 
 corporations.\n\nProposition F:  Yes.  This urgently need reform to the 
 current law to stop the hotelization of San Francisco must pass.  The most 
 notorious destroyer of our homes is Airbnb, but it is not alone. If you are 
 registered to vote at your current address, you have received at least 6 
 Yes on F mailers and 7 No on F mailers.  You can see the real estate 
 profiteers are funding the No on F mailers and the Yes on F campaign is 
 clearly a grassroots campaign.  See 
 http://www.sharebettersf.com/\n\nProposition G:  No.  This clean energy 
 proposition by PG&E, a private profit company illegally allowed to provide 
 gas and electricity to San Francisco residents and businesses while City 
 offices have public power, has been superseded by a better one, Proposition 
 H.\n\nProposition H:  Yes.  This mandates CleanPowerSF to use electricity 
 generated in California and San Francisco when possible.\n\nProposition I:  
 Yes.  This is a temporary moratorium on luxury housing construction in the 
 Mission District.  It is a good start.  THERE IS NO NEED FOR ANY LUXURY 
 HOUSING WHATSOEVER.  \n\nProposition J.  No.  This is an outrageous, 
 unconscionable gift by the taxpayers to private profit businesses in the 
 name of so-called legacy.  The older you are, the more businesses you have 
 seen come and go.  That is the risk of private profit businesses.  There is 
 no reason for the taxpayers to pay the rent of any private profit business. 
  All non-profits that are providing public services should be taken over by 
 the City which should be providing all public services.  It is our labor 
 that is the legacy that we pass from generation to generation and provides 
 for the character of our City.\n\nProposition K.  Expands the use of the 
 City’s surplus property for affordable housing from the homeless who have 
 no income to those with a workingclass income, less than $80,000 a year.  
 IN SAN FRANCISCO, WE NOW HAVE 2,352 HOMELESS CHILDREN, AND IT IS INCREASING 
 GEOMETRICALLY, ANNUALLY.  We have had a homeless crisis since 1980 when 
 Democrat Carter was president.  THE TOP PRIORITY OF OUR CITY GOVERNMENT 
 MUST BE TO HOUSE THE HOMELESS TODAY.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/10/24/18779227.php
SUMMARY:SF Vote to Save Rent Control 10/31-11/3/15
LOCATION:City Hall, San Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/10/24/18779227.php
DTSTART:20151031T170000Z
DTEND:20151031T230000Z
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