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DESCRIPTION:3/11/20 Speakout-Defend The Children & Staff-Stop The KIPP Charter School 
 Approval To Move To The Contaminated Treasure Island Elementary 
 School\n\nNo More School Kids and Teachers On Radioactive Dump 
 Sites\n\n\n3/11/20 Wednesday 5:30 PM\nPress Conference\n\nSan Francisco 
 Treasure Island Development Authority TIDA Board Meeting- 6:30 
 PM\nhttps://sftreasureisland.org/meeting/board-directors-march-11-2020-agenda\n\n401 
 13th Street\nTreasure Island\nSan Francisco, CA 
 94130\nhttps://www.google.com/maps/dir//401+13th+St,+San+Francisco,+CA+94130/@37.8275695,-122.3738481,15z/data=!4m9!4m8!1m0!1m5!1m1!1s0x808581cbf4712535:0x11b85dc7ddb847d!2m2!1d-122.374138!2d37.827819!3e0?hl=en\n\n\nJoin 
 with health and safety advocates, supporters of public education and 
 Treasure former residents to oppose the opening of the closed Treasure 
 Island ElementarySchool for the KIPP Charter School which is now in a 
 co-location with the Malcom X Academy public school. \nSFUSD school 
 district employees have said they want to move the school for a couple of 
 years to the dangerous Treasure Island Elementary School wherestudents have 
 been sickened and contaminated.\n\nThe Treasure Island Development 
 Authority has said they want to keep the school there a couple of years and 
 then remove the KIPP charter so it can berenovated for new students from 
 the million dollar condos that are being built on Treaure Island.\n\nWhile 
 we oppose all public funding to privately run charter schools we are 
 absolutely opposed to placing charter school children on a radioactive 
 contaminated SuperFund dump site.\n\nThis closed school is highly 
 dangerous.\n\n"In 2000, the Navy sent California regulators a soil analysis 
 that showed “chemicals of concern” in some backyards. The state warned 
 residents to avoid tracking dirt inside. “If you have children or pets we 
 strongly advise you not to allow them to enter the backyard,” the state 
 wrote. Beneath the elementary schoolyard, which operated until 2005, the 
 Navy found high levels of lead, dioxins, motor oil pollutants and 
 benzo(a)anthracene, a carcinogenic chemical.”\n\nIt is criminal for the 
 SFUSD officials and the City TIDA board to put children in the dangerous 
 Treasure Island Elementary School. \n\nFor more 
 information:\nUPWA\ninfo@upwa.info\n\n\nSponsored by\nUnited Public Workers 
 For Action UPWA\nDefend Public Education 
 Now\nhttps://www.facebook.com/DefendPublicEducationNOW/\n\nTIDA Plan To 
 Open KIPP Charter School At Treasure Island Elementary 
 School\nhttps://sftreasureisland.org/sites/default/files/031120%20Item%208_SFUSD%20Lease.pdf\n\n\nPlan 
 Relocate SF Bayview Doris Fisher GAP Owner KIPP Charter School In 
 Contaminated Treasure Island Meets With Resistance\nSchool district wants 
 to move KIPP elementary to vacant Treasure Island school 
 site\n\nhttps://www.sfexaminer.com/news/plan-to-relocate-bayview-charter-school-meets-with-resistance/\n\nJOSHUA 
 SABATINI\nFeb. 19, 2020 5:00 p.m.\n\nThe San Francisco Unified School 
 District wants to relocate a Bayview elementary charter school to Treasure 
 Island to free up space at Malcolm X Academy.\n\nBut KIPP charter school is 
 opposed to the idea and wants to remain right where they are to serve those 
 in the low-income neighborhood. And those who serve on the board overseeing 
 the man-made island are also not convinced the school district has it 
 right.\nUnder state law, the district is obligated to offer space for 
 approved charter schools to operate. In this case, school officials have 
 identified a former elementary school site on Treasure Island to offer to 
 KIPP Bayview Elementary, a charter school that has shared space with 
 Malcolm X Academy since 2018.\n\nThe co-location has led to a space 
 squeeze, school officials said.\n\nTreasure Island Development Authority 
 Board of Directors, which oversees the man-made island, would need to 
 approve a lease with the school district, which in turn would then lease 
 out the space to the charter school.\n\nBut the TIDA board postponed a vote 
 on the arrangement last week, despite pressure from school district 
 officials who said they had an April 1 deadline to make the deal work with 
 the charter school for the upcoming school year. The proposed lease between 
 TIDA and the school district is for three years and six months.\n\nTIDA 
 board member Linda Richardson, a proponent of charter schools, was the most 
 outspoken critic of the school district’s plan last week.\nShe said that 
 she has heard from concerned parents that the charter school should remain 
 in the Bayview. “It appears you are kicking them to Treasure Island,” 
 Richardson said.\n\nThe district closed the Treasure Island elementary 
 school site down due to low enrollment in 2005 after opening it in the 
 1960s. But the district plans to eventually reopen as a public school as 
 the island is undergoing a major redevelopment of 8,000 new 
 homes.\n\n“Why subject at-risk kids that are barely making it in their 
 community that is poor to this? It does not seem fair,” Richardson said. 
 “They have to come down to Treasure Island and then kick them out when 
 you are ready with your program. I think is unacceptable.”\n\nHowever, 
 Supervisor Shamann Walton, who represents the Bayview, told the San 
 Francisco Examiner in a text message Wednesday that he doesn’t support 
 charter schools and “would be ecstatic if KIPP Elementary School (a 
 charter school) left the Bayview.”\n\n“They are taking up space at 
 Malcolm X and basically preventing growth at that school,” Walton 
 said.\n\nMike Davis, director of charter schools for SFUSD, said that 
 KIPP’s elementary school, kindergarten through third grade, has 
 increasing student enrollment. In its first year, 2018, the school had 60 
 students and next year it projects an enrollment of 118 students.\n\nIn 
 addition to classrooms, Davis said that both schools also “have a need 
 for ancillary support spaces for private counseling, for mental and 
 physical health support and things that we provide to schools in impacted 
 neighborhoods.”\n\n“The proposal would allow KIPP to go to Treasure 
 island, have 10 classroom spaces right off the bat, when they only need 
 about six or seven,” Davis said. “They would have plenty of space for 
 their ancillary services and the squeeze would not be put on Malcolm X 
 Academy to have to either stunt their growth or retrench and they would 
 still be able to grow their program.”\n\nBut one of the concerns raised 
 by the board was how would Bayview families get to the school.\n\n“It 
 seems like logic would follow that you are expecting a lot of the families 
 to travel from the Bayview to Treasure Island,” said TIDA board member 
 Sharon Lai. “I am just trying to understand the transit pattern because 
 there is a not a whole lot of direct ways to get to the island from the 
 Bayview from my understanding.”\n\nSFUSD spokesperson Laura Dudnick said 
 in an email Wednesday the school district already made an offer on Feb. 1 
 to KIPP to use the TIDA space and KIPP has until March 1 to 
 respond.\n\n“TIDA campus provides all the space that KIPP needs, and 
 moving to that campus would allow Malcolm X to grow its own program,” 
 Dudnick said.\n\nShe said the TIDA vote postponement “gives us an 
 opportunity to provide further clarification.”\n\n“Our hope is that 
 this is the beginning of a long-term partnership with TIDA to exercise our 
 options to utilize the TIDA campus,” she said.\nThe school board had 
 actually rejected KIPP’s elementary school application in 2017, but KIPP 
 appealed to the state and prevailed. The school board has approved the 
 school’s other applications for a high school and two middle 
 schools.\n\nKIPP’s spokesperson Maria Krauter told the Examiner that 
 “the vast majority” of their students at the elementary site are from 
 families who live near their current campus.\n\nKrauter said that KIPP 
 officials told the district that they preferred to remain at the current 
 site. But that “to our surprise” the district is offering them Treasure 
 Island.\n\n“KIPP parents are very disappointed by this potential 
 placement. Treasure Island is not near our students’ homes, nor is it 
 accessible to them via public transit, so it is simply not an acceptable 
 location for the school,” Krauter said. “We look forward to working 
 with the District to identify an appropriate placement in Bayview–Hunters 
 Point for the coming school year.”\n\nThose from the public who spoke at 
 last week’s hearing raised another issue.\n\nSteve Zeltzer, of United 
 Public Workers for Action, among others, opposed any school on the site. He 
 argued that the U.S. Navy’s cleanup of the site was insufficient and 
 poses a health risk to children. A lawsuit was filed last month making 
 similar claims.\n\nTIDA board member Mark Dunlop, a Treasure Island 
 resident, said that there has been “tons of work” to cleanup the site 
 and that “I don’t think anybody on this commission would dare put a 
 child, San Francisco’s children, into a poisoned island.”\n\n“I find 
 it to be a pretty marvelous place,” Dunlop said. “I don’t glow at 
 night. I just got back from my doctor who has found me in great 
 shape.”\nCCSF TIDA 2/12/20 Hearing On Placing KIPP Charter School On 
 Contaminated Radioactive Dump Site At Treasure 
 Island\nhttps://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=181&clip_id=35177\n\nSF 
 KIPP Breaking  Up Malcom X Academy: Racist Union Busting  Fisher Charter In 
 SF Approved By 
 SFUSD\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWAX0Hzb_JI&t=172s\n\nStudents, 
 teachers and family members in San Francisco on May 8, 2018 protested the 
 San Francisco Unified School District to bust up their public school Malcom 
 X Academy which is located in Potrero Hill by placing a KIPP school 
 co-location on their school. This is also part of gentrification and 
 privatization of the city and public services.including the shutdown and 
 privatization the Potrero Hill Health Clinic.\n\nTeachers and parents 
 talked about how the Malcom X Academy has increased testing scores as a 
 community supported school and how this will now be threatened with this 
 billionaires privately run charter school on Potrero Hill.\n\nKIPP is run 
 out of the GAP corporation owned by SF billionaire John Fisher and his 
 family including Doris Fisher who is on the board of KIPP SF.  Governor 
 Brown's wife Anne Gust was previously the chief counsel of GAP and Brown 
 has appointed charter owners, operators and privatizers to the California 
 Board of Education which they control. Co-location was also written into 
 Prop 39 which was pushed by the California Charter School Association 
 billionaire Netflix owner Reed Hastings. Proposition 39 passed by a small 
 percentage and was successful because the CTA and CFT both endorsed it 
 since it also lowed the percentage needed to pass school bonds. Now 
 billions of dollars  is being spent on privatization and charters in 
 California. The UESF and CTA/CFT leadership continue to  support 
 "non-profit" charters which receive public funding and are run by private 
 hand picked boards.These privately run charter schools also have non-union 
 sometimes volunteer staff and do not pay into the CalSTRS pension system 
 undermining all public teachers pension benefits as more than $6 billion is 
 being spent on charter schools in California.\n\nStudents, teachers and 
 parents also spoke out at the SFUSD school board meeting.\n\nFor more 
 media:\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMXTzrne9aA\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAeRbh1KVkg\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_jZAYnrR_Q\nhttp://www.sfexaminer.com/sf-schools-protest-sharing-space-charter-schools/\nhttp://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/01/kipp-high-school-petition-denied-by-santa-clara-county-school-board/\nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/22/us/kipp-sexual-misconduct-michael-feinberg.html\nhttp://www.kipp.org/about-kipp/the-kipp-foundation/national-partners\nhttp://www.oakpark.com/News/Articles/8-11-2009/KIPP-school-not-the-answer-to-gap/\nhttp://www.isreview.org/issues/62/feat-charterschools.shtml\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM5VX8oBQbI\nAdditional 
 information:\nhttps://actionnetwork.org/petitions/nonewkippmarch\nhttps://www.facebook.com/DefendPublicEducationNOW/\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\nSF Malcom X Academy Walkathon 
 To Stop Billionaire Fisher Family KIPP Charter Co-Location 
 Bust-up\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXz9yg4RfBQ&t=140s\n\nStudents had 
 a walkathon in their Hunters Point Bay View neighborhood to stop the KIPP 
 charter school run by the GAP fisher family from co-locating at their 
 public school at the Malcom X Academy.  Students and supporters of public 
 education spoke out at the walkathon which took place on May 24, 
 2018.\n\nThe co-location of charter schools has been used to disrupt and 
 bust up public schools in poor and working class communities. The KIPP 
 union busting charter school chain is run by the Fisher family which owns 
 the GAP corporation in San Francisco. Doris Fisher who is on the board of 
 San Francisco KIPP and her sone John Fisher who also owns the A's  are 
 leading players in the national charter privatization campaign to destroy 
 public education.\n\nFor more 
 media:\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWAX0Hzb_JI\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMXTzrne9aA\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAeRbh1KVkg\nhttp://www.sfexaminer.com/sf-schools-protest-sharing-space-charter-schools/\nhttp://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/01/kipp-high-school-petition-denied-by-santa-clara-county-school-board/\nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/22/us/kipp-sexual-misconduct-michael-feinberg.html\nhttp://www.kipp.org/about-kipp/the-kipp-foundation/national-partners\nhttp://www.oakpark.com/News/Articles/8-11-2009/KIPP-school-not-the-answer-to-gap/\nhttp://www.isreview.org/issues/62/feat-charterschools.shtml\nhttps://eduresearcher.com/2018/03/13/denykipp/\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM5VX8oBQbI\nAdditional 
 information:\nhttps://actionnetwork.org/petitions/nonewkippmarch\nhttps://www.facebook.com/DefendPublicEducationNOW/\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\nSpecial Report: The toxic 
 legacy of a California Naval base\nIn January 2014, the Navy unearthed a 
 round piece of metal with low-level radioactivity next to their home. Towne 
 recalls her daughters suffering rashes, asthma, thyroid issues. At 10, one 
 daughter was diagnosed with ovarian cysts. There is no telling whether 
 these conditions were related to the nearby 
 pollutants.\nhttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-military-legacy-specialreport/special-report-the-toxic-legacy-of-a-california-naval-base-idUSKCN1PP1IX\nJANUARY 
 31, 2019 / 4:26 AM / A YEAR AGO\nRobin Respaut, Reade Levinson\n\nSAN 
 FRANCISCO (Reuters) - It seemed like the ideal redevelopment play. The 
 Treasure Island Naval Station, erected on a picturesque strip of land in 
 the middle of San Francisco Bay in 1942, was closed by the U.S. Navy in 
 1997. The city of San Francisco eyed the property as the centerpiece of a 
 plan for easing the technology hub’s housing crisis.\n\nIt looked like a 
 win for all, except for one neglected detail: the toxic legacy the Navy 
 left behind.\n\nTwenty-two years later, hundreds of families have rented 
 old military homes here – and contaminants are still turning up. To date, 
 the Navy’s $285.1 million Treasure Island cleanup has unearthed 
 concentrations of lead, dioxins, petroleum and more than 1,000 radioactive 
 items. Among other activities, the Navy had used the island to repair ships 
 with deck markers painted with radium.\n\nThe upshot, public health 
 specialists say, is that the Navy unnecessarily exposed families to 
 radioactive and toxic materials for decades. Since the military pulled out, 
 the island has become home to some 1,800 people, many living in subsidized 
 housing.\n\n“They never should have allowed anyone to live there,” said 
 health physicist Gaetano Taibi, a radiation safety officer on Treasure 
 Island before joining California’s Department of Public Health.\n\nAcross 
 the country, the U.S. military has shuttered hundreds of bases under a plan 
 to consolidate operations and save money. Often, a legacy of environmental 
 harm festers long after the armed forces depart: Nationwide, more than 1 of 
 every 10 of the country’s top-priority toxic-cleanup sites belong to the 
 Department of Defense. The Treasure Island cleanup, conducted under yet 
 another federal toxic remediation program, shows the problems that can 
 resurface.\n\nWhat went wrong in San Francisco Bay? A Reuters examination 
 – built from nonpublic meeting recordings, interviews with former 
 regulators, and thousands of pages of public documents including 
 engineering reports and state correspondence – shows that, year after 
 year, the Navy understated the extent of contamination. The Navy kept 
 limiting its scope of remediation, only to expand it again and again as 
 regulators and residents raised alarms.\n\n“I don’t think you have a 
 clue what is buried under the ground,” a state health physicist told the 
 Navy in 2010.\n\nThe Navy insists there was never unacceptable risk to 
 residents’ health, citing the depth and concentration of buried 
 contaminants. It has been removing pollutants “out of an abundance of 
 caution,” said Reginald Paulding, Navy Base Realignment and Closure 
 environmental coordinator.\n\nThe effects of this exposure aren’t known. 
 Scores of people who lived on the island have banded together on Facebook 
 complaining of mysterious maladies. Public records obtained by Reuters show 
 residents for years have complained to state authorities of asthma, rashes, 
 lumps, children’s hair loss and cancers. But there have been no 
 epidemiological studies that demonstrate a link between these complaints 
 and the pollutants on Treasure Island.\n\nThe contamination has had clear 
 social and economic consequences, though: It has delayed a city blueprint 
 to provide quality housing. On Treasure Island, San Francisco plans up to 
 8,000 new residences, hotels, shops and offices. Transfer of the property 
 to San Francisco, nearly 20 years behind schedule, won’t finish until the 
 end of 2021.\n\nThe city’s Treasure Island Development Authority also 
 cites litigation for delaying construction, and notes San Francisco 
 didn’t adopt a development plan until 2011. Housing construction won’t 
 break ground for another year.\n\n“It’s hard to trust the Navy at this 
 point,” said San Francisco Supervisor Aaron Peskin, who was part of an 
 unsuccessful 2011 lawsuit that tried to halt development, citing concerns 
 over the Navy’s environmental evaluation.\n\nFROM ‘MAGIC ISLE’ TO 
 TOXIC WASTE\n\nAt birth, Treasure Island was a marvel of ingenuity. The 
 400-acre island, constructed by the U.S. government in the 1930s from 
 millions of tons of sand, opened just in time for a World’s Fair. Its 
 name: “Magic Isle.”\n\nAfter the expo closed, the Navy took control of 
 the island just as the country entered World War II. Naval Station Treasure 
 Island supported air operations, managed a major communication center and 
 processed over 12,000 men daily for Pacific assignments.\n\nAfter the war, 
 the Navy established a training center for radiological decontamination on 
 site, where the mock ship USS Pandemonium helped Navy students prepare for 
 radiological warfare. The land-based vessel contained sealed pouches of 
 cesium-137, a radioactive isotope. Students practiced decontamination by 
 scrubbing the ship clean.\n\nOver the next 30 years, the Navy dumped 
 radioactive material and other contaminants in large rubbish pits. Starting 
 in the 1960s, Navy families lived in housing on base.\n\nOn the corner of 
 Avenue E and 11th Street, the Navy discarded used equipment and vessels in 
 the “South Storage Yard.” That dumping ground later became an 
 elementary schoolyard. On the corner of Avenue D and 11th Street, where the 
 island’s daycare center is now located, the Navy buried trash and 
 “burned debris,” a Navy survey found. Elsewhere, the Navy repaired 
 ships containing glow-in-the-dark gauges covered with radioluminescent 
 paint. The gauges were tossed in pits.\n\nReuters spoke with over a dozen 
 former military families, none of whom were aware at the time they were 
 living atop hazardous disposal pits.\n\n“It was really kind of a neat 
 place for a kid,” said Bo Ross, now 46, whose father was stationed on the 
 island in the mid-1980s. Ross recalls digging in his backyard at 1249 
 Exposition Drive, finding pieces of rusted, flaky metal. “We could dig so 
 far down.”\n\nWhen the military shuttered the base in the 1990s, San 
 Francisco was eager to develop. Until redevelopment started, city residents 
 could rent the old military homes. Under a redevelopment law, one-third of 
 homes would be offered to San Francisco’s homeless.\n\nA condemned area 
 on Treasure Island is seen in the foreground while the San Francisco 
 skyline is seen in the background from Treasure Island, near San Francisco, 
 California, U.S., October 18, 2018. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage\n\nIn a field 
 sampling report, Navy officials described the decades-old waste as 
 innocuous “rubbish, bottles, wire, rope, paper, steel drums, etc.” and 
 promised to remediate. A city advisory panel concluded, “there are no 
 serious toxic remediation issues.”\n\nOthers were more concerned. In 
 1993, the San Francisco Regional Water Quality Control Board wrote the Navy 
 about possible 1950s-era “disposal of radium dials,” public records 
 show. The board wanted assurances the radiation had been investigated. The 
 Navy told Reuters it was unable to locate a specific response to the water 
 board.\n\nBURIED WORRIES\n\nIn the late 1990s, just as city residents began 
 moving in, the Navy started testing the soil. Right away, results showed 
 elevated levels of lead, dioxins, DDT – an insecticide that disrupts the 
 human endocrine system – and other contaminants beneath the schoolyard, 
 daycare center and yards of some homes.\n\nThe Navy said its landlord 
 disclosed the contamination and maintained there was no health threat. 
 Still, residents were advised not to garden or otherwise disturb the 
 soil.\n\nIn 2000, the Navy sent California regulators a soil analysis that 
 showed “chemicals of concern” in some backyards. The state warned 
 residents to avoid tracking dirt inside. “If you have children or pets we 
 strongly advise you not to allow them to enter the backyard,” the state 
 wrote.\n\nBeneath the elementary schoolyard, which operated until 2005, the 
 Navy found high levels of lead, dioxins, motor oil pollutants and 
 benzo(a)anthracene, a carcinogenic chemical.\n\nIn one sample, the lead 
 concentration was measured at levels 22 times above field screening 
 guidelines. Another sample showed concentrations of DDT 31 times above the 
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s limit.\n\nA series of 
 investigations of the soil beneath the daycare center – used by military 
 families from 1985-1997 – measured levels of lead, DDT, arsenic, vanadium 
 and dioxins above EPA limits. The Navy capped the ground with asphalt and 
 re-opened the center in March 2003, writing, “Dioxins in the soil do not 
 present an unacceptable health risk.”\n\nA Navy survey in August 2003 
 found chemical and heavy metal contamination throughout the neighborhood. 
 Workers detected elevated radioactivity near Bo Ross’s old home on 
 Expedition Drive and a cluster near apartments at 1413 Flounder 
 Court.\n\nShelby Hall, who lived at 1413 Flounder, remembered construction 
 crews in hazmat suits. The Navy never mentioned radiation, she said, but 
 “they didn’t want you to be in the grass.”\n\nLIMITED CLEANUP\n\nIn 
 2006, the Navy published a lengthy report that would shape the cleanup of 
 Treasure Island. The Navy identified a handful of places to check for 
 radiation, including the yards of homes thought to be above old rubbish 
 pits. Checking elsewhere “would be purely speculative,” the Navy told 
 state regulators.\n\nThe 2006 report – based on information collected 
 prior to June 30, 2003 – did not disclose the radiation found in August 
 2003 near homes on Expedition and Flounder. Nor was there mention of a 
 historical engineering report warning of “radioactive and poisonous 
 wastes” near housing.\n\n“At that time, there was no information that 
 the debris in the [pits] presented a radiological risk,” the Navy’s 
 Pauling said.\nChildren played in the dirt while testing continued, and 
 residents kept moving in.\n\nKathryn Towne moved to Treasure Island in 2005 
 with her husband and three kids. The island offered an uninterrupted view 
 of San Francisco’s skyline and endless adventure. Sometimes her kids came 
 home with small items they’d found in the dirt: beads, metal buttons, 
 rusted disks. The girls, 5 and 7, stored their findings in a small jewelry 
 box.\n\n“They called them their treasures,” said Towne. “You know, 
 treasures from Treasure Island.”\n\nIn January 2014, the Navy unearthed a 
 round piece of metal with low-level radioactivity next to their home. Towne 
 recalls her daughters suffering rashes, asthma, thyroid issues. At 10, one 
 daughter was diagnosed with ovarian cysts. There is no telling whether 
 these conditions were related to the nearby pollutants.\n\nTowne, herself a 
 Navy daughter, said she trusted the military. “My kids played all over 
 every inch of that island,” she said. “Had I been informed, I could 
 have made a decision to not move there.”\n\nViolet Andry, then a 
 22-year-old art student, moved into an apartment at 1325 Westside Drive in 
 2006. A few months later, she found a notice on the front door saying 
 workers would be digging nearby and would place tarps over windows and 
 doors. Andry could exit her lease or stay and pay reduced rent. She 
 stayed.\n\nRobert McLean, a radiation technician who worked for Naval 
 contractor New World Environmental, said he uncovered radiological debris 
 during his first day onsite in 2007. “I found the first piece at the 
 playground,” he said.\n\nWorkers piled the radioactive debris in bins 
 next to the administrative building. Later, when the pieces were 
 inventoried, one scrap of foil measured so radioactive that standing a foot 
 away would be the equivalent of receiving one chest x-ray every 10 
 minutes.\n\nSome radiation health experts say such levels are unlikely to 
 cause lasting health impacts so long as residents aren’t in direct 
 contact with the materials. “Being just a little bit away from these 
 objects, the exposure rate is quite low,” said John Gough, Swedish Health 
 Services’ radiation safety director.\n\nSlideshow (20 Images)\n\nYet some 
 working on the site said the Navy was slow to inform the community of its 
 discoveries. “They would tell them everything was going fine and 
 everything was getting cleaned up,” said McLean, who attended the 
 island’s community meetings. “They weren’t telling the truth.”\nIn 
 April 2008, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission flagged serious 
 radiological concerns, telling California’s health department a Navy 
 contractor “recovered 40 to 50 buried radioactive sources.” One of 
 those sources emitted radiation levels that “would represent a public 
 health issue if not handled appropriately.”\n\nTENSIONS RISING\n\nThe 
 report marked the beginning of a years-long struggle by the state to get 
 the Navy to share its cleanup details. By 2010, the state’s frustration 
 boiled over, according to communications and recorded calls reviewed by 
 Reuters.\n\nThat December, state health physicist Victor Anderson berated 
 the Navy, which had given the state a 13-page list of radioactive items 
 found – gauges, buttons, and bits of metal – but did not provide the 
 levels.\n\n“We see a lack of technical expertise that frankly is 
 appalling,” Anderson said, according to a meeting recording. “How do 
 you know the extent of this problem?”\n\nLaurie Lowman, an engineering 
 program manager for the Navy’s radiological agency, replied: “Have we 
 determined the extent of this? No.” She said her agency was seeking more 
 information. Lowman did not reply to interview requests.\n\nProblems were 
 popping up across Treasure Island. In February 2011, the Navy found 
 radioactive items beneath the schoolyard, an area it had vowed had no 
 contaminants.\n\nThe state soon conducted its own scan and discovered more 
 radiological contamination, including some near the old apartment of former 
 art student Violet Andry on Westside Drive. “It’s terrible that people 
 are living there and walking their dogs while this is happening,” she 
 said.\nFor California’s public health department, this was the last 
 straw. Days later, the department warned against the Navy’s first 
 transfer of land to San Francisco, citing “high levels of radioactive 
 contamination.”\n\nLater in 2011, the state health department slapped the 
 Navy’s lead contractor, Shaw Environmental, with 16 violations, including 
 failing to survey excavated soil for radiation. “I’m just waiting for 
 some little kid to find it in his backyard and walk around in his pocket 
 and then show mom this cool thing he found,” state health physicist Gene 
 Forrer told the Navy.\n\nThe contractor told the public not to worry. In 
 August 2012, a Shaw radiation safety officer told residents, “I could 
 drape myself in that amount of material ... dribble it all over myself, and 
 I’d be okay.”\n\nAptim Holdings, which owns Shaw, did not respond to 
 interview requests. Previously, Shaw said it was following Navy 
 guidance.\n\nCHANGING ITS TUNE\n\nIn 2013, after the state uncovered a 
 radioactive object near a bus stop with potential to cause burns, hair loss 
 and ulceration, the Navy overhauled its assessment. Now, it classified the 
 entire housing neighborhood as “radiologically impacted.”\n\nThe next 
 year, San Francisco approved transferring parts of the island from Navy 
 control to the city. The housing area is slated to transfer to San 
 Francisco last in 2021, a year after new residential construction 
 groundbreaking, allowing the Navy more time for cleanup\n.\nTo date, Navy 
 contractors have uncovered 1,289 low-level radioactive items under the 
 streets and sidewalks, playgrounds and yards. More than 50 objects, if held 
 one foot away for less than a day, would expose residents to more radiation 
 than the annual public limit.\n\nEditing by Ronnie Greene\n\nOur 
 Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust 
 Principles.\n\nhttps://sftreasureisland.org/sites/default/files/031120%20Item%208_SFUSD%20Lease.pdf\n\nSF 
 Treasure Island Former Residents File Suit For Contamination /Injuries & To 
 Shutdown The Multi-Billion 
 DollarDevelopment\nhttps://youtu.be/04Aq7-TC9Ks\n\nSan Francisco Treasure 
 Island former residents filed a lawsuit on January 21, 2020, for 
 compensation for contamination, illnesses and fraud by government 
 officials,  agencies and also contractors.\n\nThe suit filed by their 
 lawyer Stanley Goff charged that they had not been informed about the 
 radioactive contamination and that it had led serious illnesses and even 
 deaths. They also asked for damages of $2 billion and the shutdown of 
 further development on the Island.\nThey also said that they had filed 
 complaints with Cal-OHSA and other government agencies about the radiation, 
 chemicals, and toxins but had received no response and 
 investigations.\n\nThey and their lawyer reported that there had been and 
 continue to be a collusion between the developers with the Navy and 
 politicians to push forward with the project regardless of health and 
 safety dangers as well as environmental dangers.\n\nAdditional media:\nSF 
 Treasure Island Conservation Corps Nightmare, The Cover-up  & Environmental 
 Racism\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb49dvh5hsU\n"No Charter School On 
 SF Treasure Island  Superfund Site!"  Environmentalists/Candidates 
 Speakout\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCvWcgx7_qI\nTreasure Island 
 Nightmare: Whistleblowers  & Former Residents Speak Out About Cancers & 
 Cover-up\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtuDlkvWJO8\nSF Hunters 
 Point/Treasure Island Radiation Whistleblower Speaks 
 Out\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htA8lqYc96Q\nSF Treasure Island 
 Radiation Whistleblowers Expose Deadly Cover-up By Tetra Tech & Government: 
 A $1 Billion Dollar Eco-Fraud\nhttps://youtu.be/lb6LxUOKWks\nSF Treasure 
 Island CHARADE, Criminal Cover-up & Fraud  By US Navy & Cover-up By 
 Pelosi/Feinstein\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRLCDIFjl7I&t=318s\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\nSF Treasure Island 
 Conservation Corps Nightmare, The Cover-up  & Environmental 
 Racism\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb49dvh5hsU\n\nWorkers of the San 
 Francisco Treasure Island Job Corps program, residents of Treasure Island 
 and Hunters Point talk about the epidemic of radiation poisoning and the 
 cover-up by government officials in San Francisco, California and the US. 
 They report that they and their families have been poisoned at the Treasure 
 Island Superfund site which was formerly a naval training center for 
 radioactive warfare.\n\nCalifornia America Corp workers were also not 
 informed about the danger of the radioactive contamination despite the fact 
 that it is a Superfund site and many of them were getting sick with serious 
 health problems.\n\nAdditionally, children at  Treasure Island were also 
 being contaminated with toxins and also were facing a cancer 
 epidemic.\nTetra Tech radiation health and safety inspectors have also been 
 fired for exposing the serious health and safety dangers and the 
 falsification of testing by this company\n.\nThe developer,  Lennar which 
 is the largest construction company in the United States plans to construct 
 8,000 condos on Treasure Island despite serious contamination and also the 
 likelihood of liquefication if there is a  major earthquake.\n\nA CCSF 
 Planning Department study of the dangers of possible development on the 
 island also reported that the real threat of liquefication in a major 
 earthquake should not permit the construction of major condominium towers 
 on Treasure Island as well as the dangers of rising water levels that will 
 be taking place in the 
 bay.\n\nhttps://sfmea.sfplanning.org/2007.0903E_CR2.pdf\n\nThese interviews 
 were done on 8/14/18.\n\nAdditional media:\n"No Charter School On SF 
 Treasure Island  Superfund Site!"  Environmentalists/Candidates 
 Speakout\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCvWcgx7_qI\nTreasure Island 
 Nightmare: Whistleblowers  & Former Residents Speak Out About Cancers & 
 Cover-up\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtuDlkvWJO8\nSF Hunters 
 Point/Treasure Island Radiation Whistleblower Speaks 
 Out\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htA8lqYc96Q\nSF Treasure Island 
 Radiation Whistleblowers Expose Deadly Cover-up By Tetra Tech & Government: 
 A $1 Billion Dollar Eco-Fraud\nhttps://youtu.be/lb6LxUOKWks\nSF Treasure 
 Island CHARADE, Criminal Cover-up & Fraud  By US Navy & Cover-up By 
 Pelosi/Feinstein\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRLCDIFjl7I&t=318s\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/03/09/18831399.php
SUMMARY:Canceled: Speakout-Defend The Children & Staff-Stop The KIPP Charter School Move To TI
LOCATION:401 13th Street\nTreasure Island\nSan Francisco, CA 
 94130\nhttps://www.google.com/maps/dir//401+13th+St,+San+Francisco,+CA+94130/@37.8275695,-122.3738481,15z/data=!4m9!4m8!1m0!1m5!1m1!1s0x808581cbf4712535:0x11b85dc7ddb847d!2m2!1d-122.374138!2d37.827819!3e0?hl=en
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/03/09/18831399.php
DTSTART:20200312T003000Z
DTEND:20200312T023000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
