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CREATED:20190510T193700Z
DESCRIPTION:"Free Lunch" and "Play Ball"  On 5/13 \nBillionaire  GAP A's Owner John 
 Fisher Offering Free Food To Support The Proposed A's Stadium On Port Of 
 Oakland Howard Terminal\n\nOn 5/13 Billionaire A's Owner John Fisher 
 Offering Free Food To Support The Proposed A's Stadium On Port Of Oakland 
 Howard Terminal\n\nGet your free lunch from the A’s on Monday May 13, 
 2019 at 12:00 Noon. The A’s want Port of Oakland land to build a new 
 stadium and 4,000 million dollar condos for further gentrification and the 
 ethnic cleansing of African Americans in West Oakland. They have bought the 
 support of the Alameda Labor Council and Building Trades Council who have 
 sold out maritime workers and the West Oakland community who will have jobs 
 destroyed and also be pushed out of their community for more wealthy white 
 residents. It is part of the gentrification plan for the port and the 
 developers who really run Oakland.\n\nSTOP THE Rip-OFF\nUnited Public 
 Workers For Action\nwww.upwa.info\n\nFree food and activities at Jack 
 London Square\nathletics.com\nAthletics News\nMay 3, 2019	View as web 
 page\nWe invite you to join us for this important day. On May 13 at noon, 
 we will host a community rally in Jack London Square ahead of the 
 vote\nDear A's Fan, \n\nToday the Port of Oakland Commissioners announced 
 that they will meet on Monday, May 13 to vote on a preliminary term sheet 
 that would be the first step toward us building our new privately financed 
 ballpark at Jack London Square. \n\nWe invite you to join us for this 
 important day. On May 13 at noon, we will host a community rally in Jack 
 London Square ahead of the vote. We'll have free food and activities as we 
 celebrate and show support for this project. \n\nOur waterfront ballpark 
 project will create $3 billion in economic impact, 5,000 jobs, much-needed 
 housing including affordable housing, drive business to Jack London Square, 
 and more. This project is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Oakland. To 
 learn more about our waterfront ballpark at Jack London Square and the 
 progress we’ve made so far, visit WeAreRooted.com. \n\nWe hope to see you 
 at our community rally proudly wearing your green and gold. \n\nPlay ball, 
 \n\nDave Kaval\nOakland A's President \n\nOakland needs port jobs, funding 
 for schools and housing, not a new ballpark\nBy Jack Heyman April 29, 2019 
 Updated: April 29, 2019 5:33 
 p.m.\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/Open-Forum-Oakland-needs-port-jobs-funding-for-13805385.php?psid=1z1MT\nComments\n\nShipping 
 containers line the the Charles P. Howard Terminal, a possible location for 
 a new Oakland Athletics baseball stadium, on Monday, Sept. 17, 2018, in 
 Oakland, Calif.\nPhoto: Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle 
 2018\n\nPerhaps the hottest clash in the Bay Area baseball world since the 
 1989 World Series between the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland A’s 
 was interrupted by an earthquake is peaking now — the $600 
 million-and-counting, privately financed proposal by Oakland A’s owner 
 John Fisher to build a stadium at Howard Terminal in Jack London 
 Square.\n\nThis proposal is backed by politicians and real estate 
 developers. It is opposed by environmental groups and many trade unions led 
 by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, which represents 
 dockworkers and boatmen. Ostensibly, maritime and railroad companies also 
 oppose building an A’s stadium in the port.\n\nThe ILWU plans to shut 
 down the port in protest with a rally and march in the port on May Day, the 
 traditional celebration of labor that is promoted by the international 
 labor movement.\n\nFisher’s proposal promises affordable housing and 
 jobs. His opponents view those promises as a ploy. A recent event in West 
 Oakland billed as a “community meeting” turned out to be a PowerPoint 
 presentation by professionals pushing the stadium. Promoting project 
 benefits to the predominantly African American audience, one presenter 
 explained that the stadium would provide part-time jobs, such as peanut 
 sellers and parking lot attendants. Affordable housing was also 
 gratuitously promised.\n\n\nSports arenas are being built all over the 
 country, often amid controversy. Hardly ever are these grandiose promises 
 of jobs and housing kept.\n\nFor instance, at the Barclays Center in 
 Brooklyn, N.Y., home of the Brooklyn Nets and New York Islanders (and 
 formerly known as the Atlantic Yards), the community is still waiting for 
 the “affordable housing units.” After 16 years of planning, more than 
 half are not built. Now the owners are asking for a 10-year extension 
 because they didn’t meet their obligation within the agreed upon time 
 frame. And the jobs ...“fugetaboutit!”\n\nOn April 22, representatives 
 of the Oakland A’s went to Sacramento to try to enlist the support of 
 politicians. Already some Democratic state lawmakers are working behind 
 closed doors to pass fast-track legislation to permit the stadium. That’s 
 right from the Democratic Party’s 1993 fast-track playbook to pass the 
 North American Free Trade Agreement: Tell workers you’re a “friend of 
 labor” to get their vote and oppose NAFTA, then, when you’re elected, 
 put the legislation on the fast track claiming it’ll bring more jobs. 
 Clearly, workers need their own party to fight for jobs.\n\nOakland Mayor 
 Libby Schaaf says she’s “encouraged” by the Howard Terminal proposal. 
 Oakland A’s President Dave Kaval said, “We’re building a new 
 neighborhood in this part of the city.”\n\nIn other words: Promoting 
 gentrification, which will displace West Oakland residents.\n\nFisher, the 
 billionaire owner of the A’s who also owns the Gap clothing retailer, 
 uses his wealth to privatize public education with the KIPP and Rocketship 
 charter school chains, which he controls. Oakland teachers, who went on 
 strike this spring to win wage and working condition improvements, 
 questioned why the port, which boasted a record-breaking year in 2018 of 
 2.5 million containers and collected millions of dollars in tariffs, 
 didn’t pay a penny to fund Oakland public education. The Port of Long 
 Beach helps fund city social services and schools. Why not the Port of 
 Oakland? Mayor Schaaf was formerly director of public affairs for the Port 
 of Oakland — she should know.\n\n\nHundreds of activists march from the 
 Port of Oakland as part of May Day protests in Oakland, California on May 
 1, 2015. In 2015, protests focused on stopping tech worker buses and 
 widening inequality in the Bay Area. This year, the May Day protest focuses 
 on stopping a proposed new baseball stadium at Howard Terminal.\nPhoto: 
 Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images 2015\nThe longshore union has a proud 
 history of making the Bay Area a progressive place to live and work:\n\n• 
 Leading the Bay Area labor movement in the 1934 San Francisco General 
 Strike;\n\n• Initiating a racial integration campaign of union ranks 30 
 years before the Civil Rights Act;\n\n• Striking against a ship from 
 South Africa to help topple the apartheid regime;\n\n• Financing 
 affordable housing in San Francisco in St. Francis Square;\n\n• Shutting 
 down Bay Area ports to protest racist police violence.\n\nNow the ILWU, the 
 longshore union, is calling on the Bay Area’s working people to continue 
 the struggle to keep and expand good-paying union jobs with benefits, to 
 build real affordable housing, to fund public education and defend 
 immigrant rights. And to reject a new ballpark at Howard Terminal.\n\nJack 
 Heyman, a retired ILWU member, worked in the San Francisco Bay Area as a 
 longshoreman and boatman for over 30 years.\n\nILWU May Day rally to 
 protest A’s stadium at the port\n\nWhere: Intersection of Market and 
 Embarcadero West, Oakland (Howard Terminal)\n\nWhen: 11 a.m. to noon, 
 Wednesday, May 1, march to Port of Oakland headquarters, 530 Water St.\n\n2 
 p.m., march to Oscar Grant Plaza (in front of Oakland City Hall).\n\n4 
 p.m., march with Sin Fronteras to Lake Merritt.\n\nWhat: Protest demands 
 are:\n\nStop the proposed Oakland A’s stadium in the port.\n\nSupport 
 good-paying union jobs.\n\nBuild affordable housing.\n\nFund public 
 education — oppose Oakland school closings and charter schools.\n\nDefend 
 immigrant rights, support sanctuary for all, support “No Ban, No Wall” 
 campaign (No federal ban on immigration from seven Muslim nations, no 
 U.S.-Mexico border wall).\n\nBay Area May Day Rallies Draw Hundreds Of 
 Union Workers, 
 Supporters\nhttps://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2019/05/01/bay-area-may-day-protests-underway-as-workers-rally-for-higher-wages/\nBy 
 Jackie WardMay 1, 2019 at 1:45 pmFiled Under:Bay Area May Day Protests, 
 Construction, Development, Housing, May Day, May Day Protests, Oakland, 
 Oakland news, Protest, Wages\n\nOAKLAND (CBS SF) — Hundreds of union 
 workers, social justice advocates and their supporters were rallying and 
 marching through the streets of many Bay Area cities on Wednesday to 
 observe International Workers’ Day.\n\nThe annual May Day events are 
 intended to draw attention to the need for union jobs, equity in hiring, 
 support for public education and protection for “immigrants, refugees, 
 workers and all people impacted by state violence,” according to 
 organizers.\n\n“It’s a historical day around the struggle against 
 economic and social inequity,” said Tova Fry, a member of the Anti 
 Police-Terror Project and Oakland Sin Fronteras, social justice groups 
 helping organize Wednesday’s events.\n\n\n\nFry’s groups are 
 coordinating the day’s events with the International Longshore Workers 
 Union, which hosted an 11 a.m. rally at the Port of Oakland.\n\nClarence 
 Thomas, a retired longshore worker and ILWU spokesman, said he was there to 
 help protect union jobs.\n\n“My family has been associated with ILWU 
 since 1944. My mother now is 90 years old,” Thomas said. “She has been 
 the daughter of a longshore worker, the wife of a longshore worker and the 
 mother of a longshore worker.\n\n“My mother still enjoys receiving part 
 of my father’s pension and health care benefits, and I want to make sure 
 that continues,” said Thomas, a West Oakland native.\n\nThomas said the 
 proposed new Oakland A’s baseball stadium at the port’s Howard Terminal 
 will threaten the kinds of jobs that have supported his family for 
 generations.\n\nThe project will disrupt normal port operations, lead to 
 possible job losses and intensify gentrification in the West Oakland 
 neighborhood, Thomas said.\n\n“This really does provide a sterling 
 example of the price of capitalism, when a billionaire wants to build a 
 ballpark and housing at a location that … is the economic engine of the 
 Northern California region,” Thomas said.\n\nPort of Oakland spokesman 
 Mike Zampa said that port commissioners have met extensively with maritime 
 representatives and have heard their concerns about the proposed 
 stadium.\n\n“The Port of Oakland last year adopted a five-year strategic 
 plan that calls for record maritime business growth into the next 
 decade,” Zampa said. “The port will not jeopardize that 
 business.”\n\nThe port itself is closed for eight hours Wednesday as part 
 of an annual May Day agreement between union leadership and the port’s 
 terminal operators.\n\n“Labor is not shutting down the port,” Zampa 
 said. “It’s not a strike.”\n\nOakland’s May Day events kicked off 
 at 6 a.m. when hundreds of construction workers with the Alameda County 
 Building Trades Council and Alameda County Labor Council picketed two 
 non-union building sites near downtown Oakland, then marched to Oakland 
 City Hall for a rally.\n\nThe unions are asking the city to require worker 
 protections, including project labor agreements, for projects on publicly 
 owned land, to “enact labor standards and public accountability for 
 building in downtown Oakland” and to prioritize building affordable 
 housing on city land, according to union leadership.\n\n“We really feel 
 Oakland is a union town, was built on the backs of union men and women,” 
 said Andreas Cluver, secretary-treasurer of the Alameda County Building 
 Trades Council. “The Oakland teacher’s strike shows the level of 
 support (unions) have from the residents of this city.”\n\nWhile not 
 addressing the unions’ requests directly, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf on 
 Wednesday released a statement of praise for unions 
 generally.\n\n“Oakland celebrates May Day because Oakland values and 
 honors our workers,” Schaaf said. “We work hard and champion social 
 justice. Union strength is woven into Oakland’s DNA.”\n\nAfter the ILWU 
 port rally, union members planned to join the social justice groups for a 
 City Hall rally at 2 p.m. and for a 3:30 p.m.  march to the Lake Merritt 
 Amphitheater.\n\nIn Concord, demonstrators held signs reading “The rent 
 is too high” as they focused on tenants’ rights and the , saying that 
 they are workers’ rights.\n\n“Families who have been here a really long 
 time, have roots in Concord, are just getting pushed out to unjust 
 evictions and skyrocketing rents. We are here today demanding that the city 
 of concord, who has the power to actually protect tenants from this type of 
 displacement to do something about it,” said Nicole Zapata, one of the 
 march’s organizers.\n\nWith just 28 percent of the Bay Area’s homes 
 affordable to families making $100,000 per year, advocates say working 
 class families are getting pushed out of places like Concord.\n\n“I work 
 a lot with the community and there’s been a lot of unjust 
 evictions–there’s been a lot of reports of skyrocketing rents like 
 $400, $600 all at once,” said Cecilia Perez-Mejia with First 5 
 California, an advocacy group.\n\nAmong the crowd marching from Meadowhome 
 Park to Todos Santos Park were two members of the Concord City Council who 
 say they support the cause.\n\n“We need protections to protect families, 
 individuals, seniors who do rent in our community from landlords who do 
 abuse their power – who only want profit and don’t care much about the 
 community within Concord,” said councilmember Dominic Aliano.\n\n“The 
 most important thing about building a community is having people who are 
 committed to our community. We have to people who live here and the longer 
 they live here–the more committed they are to the community,” said 
 councilmember Edi Birsan.\n\n\nHundreds rally for immigrant rights, local 
 union hires on May Day in 
 Oakland\nhttp://www.ktvu.com/news/hundreds-rally-for-immigrant-rights-local-union-hires-on-may-day-in-oakland\n\nMay 
 Day: Hundreds rally to march in Oakland for local union hires, immigrants' 
 rights\nHundreds rally for immigrant rights, local union hires on May Day 
 in Oakland\nBy Elissa Harrington, KTVU, Andre Senior , Kiley Russell 
 \nPosted May 01 2019 05:57AM PDT\nVideo Posted May 01 2019 08:45PM 
 PDT\nUpdated May 01 2019 10:42PM PDT\nOAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) - 
 International Workers Day, also known as May Day, was marked by marches and 
 rallies around the world, but some prominent gatherings were held right 
 here in the Bay Area. \n\nA Wednesday rally at Oakland's Frank Ogawa Plaza 
 was followed by a march through downtown streets where hundreds of union 
 workers, social justice advocates and their supporters asked for local 
 union hires as well as immigrant's rights. \n\n\n\nThe evening march 
 compounded a 6 a.m. construction worker rally at 17th and Webster streets, 
 urging Mayor Libby Schaaf to require law changes that would guarantee 
 publicly-funded projects use locally hired union workers for those jobs.  
 \n\nHundreds of union workers, social justice advocates and 
 their supporters are rallying and marching through the streets of Oakland 
 Wednesday to observe International Workers' Day\nHundreds of union 
 workers, social justice advocates and their supporters are rallying and 
 marching through the streets of Oakland Wednesday to observe International 
 Workers' Day\n\n\nHundreds of union workers, social justice advocates and 
 their supporters are rallying and marching through the streets of Oakland 
 Wednesday to observe International Workers' Day\n\n"A  lot of developers 
 [are] coming in from out of town but not using good union labor for these 
 sustainable projects," said Andreas Cluver, secretary treasurer for  
 Alameda County Building Trades Council. "A lot of contractors are coming 
 from the valley and getting paid $18 an hour. We should be offering better 
 careers." \n\nJeff Dixon, a organizer for UA Local 483, said he is strongly 
 against any out-of-town developers coming into Oakland and paying 
 substandard wages. He said, "We don't want people coming up here from LA, 
 San Diego and Washington bringing their own people" and not paying 
 prevailing Bay Area wages.\n\n"A lot of people forget that America is built 
 on union labor," Dixon said. \n\nSpecifically, the unions called the 
 Oakland political leadership to mandate that the city's public lands be 
 used to build homes that Oakland residents can afford using a workforce who 
 is paid a fair wage and sign a citywide agreement, mandating labor, 
 material and safety standards.\n\nIn addition, International Longshore 
 Workers Union held an 11 a.m. rally at the Port of Oakland. They are 
 calling for attacks against immigrants and refugees to stop. Their slogan: 
 “No ban, no wall, human rights and sanctuary for all.” \n\nOakland 
 teachers, who recently wrapped up tense negotiations with Oakland Unified 
 School District, stood in solidarity with the ILWU, which is protesting the 
 proposed Oakland A's stadium at Howard Terminal. \n\nClarence Thomas, a 
 retired longshore worker and ILWU spokesman, said he was there to help 
 protect union jobs.\n\n"My family has been associated with ILWU since 1944. 
 My mother now is 90 years old," Thomas said. "She has been the daughter of 
 a longshore worker, the wife of a longshore worker and the mother of a 
 longshore worker.\n\n"My mother still enjoys receiving part of my father's 
 pension and health care benefits, and I want to make sure that continues," 
 said Thomas, a West Oakland native.\n\nThomas said the proposed new Oakland 
 A's baseball stadium at the port's Howard Terminal will threaten the kinds 
 of jobs that have supported his family for generations.\n\nThe project will 
 disrupt normal port operations, lead to possible job losses and intensify 
 gentrification in the West Oakland neighborhood, Thomas said. \n\n"This 
 really does provide a sterling example of the price of capitalism, when a 
 billionaire wants to build a ballpark and housing at a location that ... is 
 the economic engine of the Northern California region," \nThomas 
 said.\n\nPort of Oakland spokesman Mike Zampa said that port commissioners 
 have met extensively with maritime representatives and have heard their 
 concerns about the proposed stadium.\n\n"The Port of Oakland last year 
 adopted a five-year strategic plan that calls for record maritime business 
 growth into the next decade," Zampa said. "The port will not jeopardize 
 that business."\n\nThe port itself is closed for eight hours Wednesday as 
 part of an annual May Day agreement between union leadership and the port's 
 terminal operators. \n\nHistorically, workers and unions have taken to the 
 streets on May Day to demand better conditions for the working class.  
 \n\n\nAlameda Labor Council, AFL-CIO Backs Howard Terminal Ballpark for 
 Oakland A's\nLabor unions representing 135,000 workers cite economic 
 benefits, job creation and commitment to working people 
 \nhttps://www.mlb.com/press-release/alameda-labor-council-afl-cio-backs-howard-terminal-ballpark-for-oakland-a-s\nMay 
 9, 2019\n\nOAKLAND – The Alameda Labor Council, AFL-CIO, voted to support 
 the Oakland A’s efforts to build a new ballpark at Howard Terminal. The 
 Council, composed of 135 unions representing 135,000 workers in healthcare, 
 transportation, education, construction, manufacturing, and service, 
 expressed strong support for the project given its potential to provide 
 significant economic benefits for working families throughout the East Bay. 
 The Labor Council will continue to advocate that the A’s sign Community 
 Benefits Agreements to ensure the project opens job opportunities for 
 Oakland residents, stems displacement and creates cleaner 
 air.\n\n“Oakland’s working people want to see job creation and 
 community-strengthening projects happen right here at home,” said Alameda 
 Labor Council Executive Secretary-Treasurer Liz Ortega. “The Howard 
 Terminal ballpark for the A’s is a win for working people, and our 
 families. With this agreement, we’re standing on third base with no outs. 
 But we’re not home yet. We will continue to work with the A's to reach a 
 community benefits agreement to ensure we all cross-home plate 
 together.”\n\nAccording to the Bay Area Council Economic Institute, the 
 privately financed project would create approximately 2,000 construction 
 jobs and even more jobs would be generated by the ongoing operation of the 
 ballpark. Additionally, the surrounding development will spur economic 
 development and job growth in the hospitality, retail, restaurant, and 
 office sectors in Oakland and throughout the East Bay.\n\nThe A’s have 
 committed to union labor agreements for both construction and operations of 
 the ballpark that provide living wage jobs. “This is a 
 once-in-a-generation opportunity for Oakland,” Ortega said. “Building a 
 ballpark at Howard Terminal will create sustainable development that 
 benefits workers and their families.”\n\nIn addition to the A’s 
 ballpark project at Howard Terminal, the Council is also officially 
 endorsing the A’s redevelopment project at Oakland Coliseum, provided it 
 also include community benefits.\n\nRead more: Oakland Athletics\nOn May 
 Day 2019 OEA Pres Keith Brown On The Stadium, Port, ILWU & Public 
 Education\nhttps://youtu.be/uZB-hG5hw0c\nOn May Day 2019 at the Howard 
 Terminal in the Port of Oakland, OEA president Keith Brown talked about the 
 role of the proposed A's stadium, the ILWU, port jobs and public education. 
 He discussed the growing gentrification of West Oakland and the need for 
 the port to provide funding for public education. The Oakland Education 
 Association facing school closures and a massive increases of charter 
 schools some of whom are funded by A’s owner John Fisher who with his 
 family owns The GAP and  runs the Rocketship and KIPP charter school chain. 
 Dave Kava, manager of the A's  is on the board of the Rocketship Charter 
 School Chain. The plan of Fisher is not only to build a stadium on working 
 port property but to build 4,000 condos costing more than $1 million 
 each.\nThis was part of Pacifica May Day Programming with WorkWeek 
 Radio\nhttps://www.facebook.com/pacificaradiomayday\n#KPFAMayDay2019\nInternational 
 Labor Media Network\nhttps://ilmnetwork.org\nAdditional media:\nThis Is Our 
 Port-May Day 2019 Speakers At Oakland Howard 
 Terminal\nhttps://youtu.be/Y_WQNoEj1cY\nWhose Dock Is This? Our Dock! CWA 
 AFA Pres Sara Nelson At Oakland Howard Terminal May Day 
 2019\nhttps://youtu.be/rk0t_mTmErI\nSara Nelson AFA CWA President At May 
 Day Oakland Howard Terminal\nhttps://youtu.be/_inof_Hh5Bo\nOn May Day,  
 Canadian Native American  ILWU 500 Unionist Joeen Karen Speaks In Oakland  
 For  Solidarity\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Jkz62YiRiE\n"It's 
 Insane!" ILWU  Longshore Workers & Truckers Challenge Oakland A's 
 Billionaire Owner John Fisher’s  Land Grab  Of Howard 
 Terminal\nhttps://youtu.be/5A8uZpqSX_M\nILWU 10, May Day 2019, The A's Port 
 Stadium, Privatization & Gentrification In 
 Oakland\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMd_NFNRtjU\nA's Billionaire Owner 
 Fisher Loses Laney College Land Grab-Labor Community Speak 
 Out\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMvg45CFGjU\nLaney Land Not For Sale! 
 Community, Students & Faculty Rally Against A's Land Grab Of College 
 Land\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lx-tVzsl-Ck\nProduction of Labor 
 Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/05/10/18823380.php
SUMMARY:"Free Lunch" Billionaire A's Owner Fisher Offering Free Food For New Stadium
LOCATION:Broadway & Waters St.\nOakland
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/05/10/18823380.php
DTSTART:20190513T190000Z
DTEND:20190513T200000Z
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