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DESCRIPTION:Commemorate July 5 & Bloody Thursday At SSA-STOP Racist Attacks On The 
 Docks And Fisher SF Racist Charter Privatization At SF Malcom X 
 Academy\nSTOP The Racist Graffiti at SSA  In The Port Of 
 Oakland\nCommemorate July 5 and Bloody Thursday\nRally On Sunday July 5, 
 2020 10 AM at SSA Terminal with Carvavan to Oakland Coliseum\n\nSSA\n1717 
 Middle Harbor Rd, Oakland, CA 94607\n\nJuly 5th is the anniversary of 
 “Bloody Thursday” in 1934 when two longshore union strike supporters 
 were killed by the police\nToday  in 2020 the police murders continue 
 against Black and Brown workers and also there has been an escalation of 
 hanging nooses and racist graffiti in the worksite including at the SSA 
 terminal at the Port of Oakland.  Hanging nooses and other racist graffiti 
 has been used at the terminal in an effort to terrorize the workers and it 
 has to stop NOW!\n\nThe Committee To Stop Police Terror and System Racism 
 will be having a rally with physical distancing at SSA at 10 AM followed by 
 caravan to the Oakland Coliseum to protest the proposed sale of the 
 coliseum to A’s billionaire owner John Fisher.\n\nFisher with the support 
 of local polticians is seeking to privatize the Howard Terminal for a 
 stadium, thousands of million dollar condos and a hotel. This would destroy 
 the jobs of thousands of ILWU Longshore workers along with maritime workers 
 and truckers. It  is a racist attack on Black and Brown people in Oakland 
 and would also lead to further gentrification pushing the people who built 
 Oakland out of their city.\n\nThe caravan will end up at the Oakland 
 Coliseum where a rally will be held against the sale of the Coliseium to 
 Fisher by the City of Oakland and also against the use of tax money build a 
 new stadium for a billionaire.\n\nWe need to protect or public lands, stop 
 the privatization and protect the community around the Colesium which 
 already has a BART line and infrastrure that has been built up over 
 decades. John Fisher and hsi family also control the KIPP and Rocketship 
 charter school chain which is privatizing and destroying public schools 
 including the Malcom X Academy in San Francisco Hunters Point Bay View. 
 Enough Is Enough!\n\nCommittee To Stop Police Terror and Systemic 
 Racism\nhttps://www.juneteenthspt.com\n\nFisher A's Stadium privatization 
 Education Malcom X Academy\n\nBay Area Juneteenth Event Includes Protest 
 Against Right Wing Billionaire Fisher Family: Taking Public Space from 
 Minorities in SF and 
 Oakland\nhttps://www.counterpunch.org/2020/06/18/bay-area-juneteenth-event-includes-protest-against-right-wing-billionaire-fisher-family-taking-public-space-from-minorities-in-sf-and-oakland/\nJUNE 
 18, 2020\nby ANNA M. HENNESSEYFacebookTwitterRedditEmail\n\n\nDoris Fisher, 
 who is a KIPP Charter School founder, and her sons (Robert, John, and 
 William) are currently using their money to dismantle the public school 
 system in San Francisco and take public land in Oakland. The main people 
 affected by the Fisher’s privatization are low-income minorities.\nThe 
 billionaire Fisher family from San Francisco is part of a dark money group 
 known as “Americans for Job Security” that supported Republicans with 
 millions of dollars in the 2010 midterm elections and the 2012 presidential 
 election. Other prominent donors to the fund include right-wing supporter, 
 Charles Schwab, who has donated significant funds to back Donald Trump and 
 pay Trump’s legal fees, as well as the DeVos family. Betsy DeVos, Donald 
 Trump’s Secretary of Education, is well known for her strong support of 
 the charter school movement across the country.\nThis month, KIPP sued the 
 already cash strapped San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD), with 
 officials stating that they want more space at Malcolm X Academy, a K-5 
 public school in San Francisco. In 2018, KIPP Bayview Elementary began 
 appropriating space for transitional kindergarten and now seeks to overtake 
 more space for second, third, and eventually fourth grade classes, a move 
 that takes resources from students at Malcolm X. Malcolm X Academy is a 
 school historically devoted to serving low-income students (95% of the 
 school population), including African American, Latinos and Pacific 
 Islanders. Like other charter schools, KIPP drains the public school 
 system, depleting funds and physical space for students most in need at 
 Malcolm X.\nBoth the Black Lives Matter and the NAACP have raised alarms 
 about charter school growth in California and elsewhere, emphasizing how 
 charter privatization of schools in the US is a deep problem for social 
 justice.\nIn the meantime, Doris Fisher’s son John is head of a movement 
 to turn the Port of Oakland into thousands of $1 million dollar condos to 
 finance a project known as the Howard Terminal Project. That project 
 includes construction of a new ballpark for the Oakland A’s. John Fisher 
 owns the A’s. The Port of Oakland includes miles of waterfront property 
 with public parks traditionally serving Oakland, a city and community with 
 a large minority population.\nThe Juneteenth event in Oakland this coming 
 Friday 6/19 is devoted to stopping police terror and ending systemic 
 racism, as well as to stopping privatization of our public spaces, 
 including the Port of Oakland. Racism is about physical violence to human 
 bodies. But it is also about the insidious ways in which the wealthy steal 
 land and resources from minority populations.\nMore articles by:ANNA M. 
 HENNESSEY\nAnna Hennessey is a writer, scholar, and book author in San 
 Francisco.\nBayview charter school run by GAP billionaire Doris Fisher sues 
 SFUSD for more classroom space At Malcom X Academy\nThe San Francisco 
 Examiner\n\nhttps://www.sfexaminer.com/news/bayview-charter-school-sues-sfusd-for-more-classroom-space/\n\nBayview 
 charter school sues SFUSD for more classroom space\nCompany calls plan to 
 move to Treasure Island a ‘bad faith offer’\nJOSHUA SABATINIJun. 2, 
 2020 5:50 p.m.NEWSTHE CITY\n\n\nA charter school operating in the 
 Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood has sued the San Francisco Unified 
 School District after it tried to force the school to relocate nine miles 
 away to Treasure Island.\n\nKIPP Bay Area Public Schools, part of a chain 
 of 242 charter schools across the country, filed the lawsuit in San 
 Francisco Superior Court against the district and Superintendent Vincent 
 Matthews alleging they have violated a state law to provide sufficient 
 accommodations to charter schools.\n\nThe relationship between the school 
 district and the charter school company, which operates three schools in 
 the Bayview District, has been strained since the beginning, when in 2017 
 the district’s Board of Education voted to oppose KIPP’s opening at 
 Malcolm X Academy. The state Board of Education voted to reverse the 
 denial.\n\nSince 2018, KIPP Bayview Elementary has operated at the 
 district’s Malcolm X Academy, which is where school officials wish to 
 remain to educate a growing student body of 137 next fall. Enrollment for 
 the 2019-20 year was 107 students. The school is expanding next year from a 
 transitional kindergarten to second-grade school to add a third-grade 
 class. There are plans to add a fourth-grade class in the subsequent 
 year.\n\nInstead of agreeing to that request, the school district offered 
 KIPP a new space on Treasure Island, nine miles away, as was first reported 
 by the San Francisco Examiner.\n\n\nMaria Krauter, a KIPP spokesperson, 
 said Monday that they were “shocked.” The lawsuit calls it a “bad 
 faith offer.”\n\nKIPP rejected it and the district subsequently offered 
 to let them keep using Malcolm X Academy in six classrooms, which they have 
 currently. But they argue they need 10 classrooms. The district had agreed 
 to the charter school’s 10 classrooms when it planned the move to 
 Treasure Island, the lawsuit said, but then “abruptly and illegally 
 retracted” that determination when later saying they could remain at 
 Malcolm X.\n\nThe lawsuit alleges the district has violated Proposition 39, 
 a 2000 voter-approved state measure that sets provisions about how school 
 districts must accommodate charter schools, first by trying to relocate 
 KIPP to Treasure Island and then by denying the school the amount of 
 classrooms needed for the number of students they plan to serve.\n\nThe 
 lawsuit asks the court to compel the district to provide 10 classrooms at 
 Malcolm X.\n\nThe school district declined to comment on the suit.\n\n\nIn 
 Feburary, a school district official said they wanted to move the charter 
 to Treasure Island to address impacts on Malcolm X, as previously reported 
 by the Examiner.\n\n“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,” Mike Davis, director of charter schools for SFUSD, said 
 at the time.\n\nKrauter said “we believe there is plenty of room to 
 share.” She said Macolm X at its maximum enrollment had 440 kids and now 
 it’s “just a bit over 100.”\n\n\n“There is a way to have a mutually 
 beneficial shared campus,” she said. “They deserve a high-quality 
 option in the neighborhood.”\n\nThere are strong opinions about charter 
 schools.\n\nSupervisor Shamann Walton was on the school board when he voted 
 against KIPP and he continues to oppose the school at Malcolm X. He 
 represents the Bayview on the Board of Supervisors.\n\n“Obviously I hope 
 that KIPP stops trying to take resources away from a community that needs 
 all the support they can get for our students,” Walton said. “The 
 blatant disregard for protecting precious resources, even during this 
 crisis, is appalling.”\n\nKrauter said, “This is not an us vs. them, 
 and our students vs. their students.”\n\n“Our students are SFUSD 
 students. And our students are Bayview-Hunters Point residents,” she 
 said.\n\nChristy Neasley, who lives in the Bayview, said her adopted 
 6-year-old niece has attended the charter school since it began, when she 
 enrolled her in transitional kindergarten two years ago.\n\n“She is 
 thriving so much in this school,” Neasley said.\n\n\nShe said she 
 doesn’t understand why there has to be this conflict between the district 
 and the charter school.\n\n“I’m a little angry. But I’m more worried 
 because I really want her to keep on with this path. I don’t want them to 
 break this family up,” she said.\n\nNeasley said she thought the 
 district’s initial offer to send KIPP to Treasure Island was disingenuous 
 and that no one would have sent their kids from the Bayview there, which 
 would have taken about an hour by bus to get there.\n\n“I thought it was 
 an offer just for them to make the school close down,” she 
 said.\n\nKrauter called the lawsuit “a last 
 resort.”\n\n\n\njsabatini@sfexaminer.com\nGap Co-Founder Doris Fisher Is 
 Bankrolling the Charter School Agenda – and Pouring Dark Money Into CA 
 Politics\nhttps://www.alternet.org/2016/09/gap-cofounder-bankrolling-charter-school-agenda/\nWritten 
 by Joel Warner / Capital And Main September 27, 2016\nAs co-founder of the 
 Gap, San Francisco-based business leader and philanthropist Doris Fisher 
 boasts a net worth of $2.6 billion, making her the country’s third 
 richest self-made woman, according to Forbes. And she’s focused much of 
 her wealth and resources on building charter schools. She and her late 
 husband Donald donated more than $70 million to the Knowledge is Power 
 Program (KIPP) and helped to personally build the operation into the 
 largest network of charter schools in the country, with 200 schools serving 
 80,000 students in 20 states. Doris’ son John serves as the chairman of 
 KIPP’s board of directors, and she sits on the board herself.\nDoris’ 
 passion for charter schools also fuels her political donations. While not 
 as well-known as other deep-pocketed charter school advocates like Eli 
 Broad and the Walton family (heirs to the Walmart fortune), Fisher and her 
 family have quietly become among the largest political funders of charter 
 school efforts in the country. Having contributed $5.6 million to state 
 political campaigns since 2013, Fisher was recently listed as the second 
 largest political donor in California by the Sacramento Bee – and nearly 
 all of her money now goes to promoting pro-charter school candidates and 
 organizations. While often labelled a Republican, she gives to Democrats 
 and Republicans alike, just as long as they’re supportive of the charter 
 school movement. According to campaign finance reports, so far this 
 election cycle she’s spent more than $3.3 million on the political action 
 committees of charter school advocacy groups EdVoice and the California 
 Charter Schools Association (CCSA), as well as pro-charter candidates. 
 (Christopher Nelson, managing director of the Fishers’ philanthropic 
 organization, sits on the board of CCSA, which, along with EdVoice, 
 declined to comment for this article.)\nFisher’s philanthropic and 
 political efforts are not as straightforward as simply promoting education, 
 however. Recent investigations have found that she’s used dark-money 
 networks to funnel funds into California campaign initiatives that many say 
 targeted teachers and undermined public education. It’s why many 
 education activists worry about the impact her money is having on 
 California politics – and on California schoolchildren.\nFisher’s 
 decision to double down on charter school candidates and political action 
 groups this election season comes at a time of increasing backlash against 
 such schools, which operate largely independently of public school systems 
 but still receive public funding. Last month, the American Civil Liberties 
 Union of Southern California and Public Advocates reported that more than 
 250 California charter schools – more than one-fifth of the state’s 
 total – violated state law by denying enrollment to low-performing and 
 other potentially undesirable students (the report caused more than 50 of 
 the schools to change or clarify admissions policies, leading the ACLU to 
 remove them from its list). This came after a study of charter school 
 discipline by the UCLA’s Center for Civil Rights Remedies in March that 
 found that charters suspended African-American students and students with 
 disabilities at higher rates than traditional schools. And last year, a 
 report by the Center for Popular Democracy, the Alliance of Californians 
 for Community Empowerment Institute and Public Advocates Inc. concluded 
 that in California alone, charter school fraud and negligence had cost 
 state taxpayers more than $81 million.\nIt’s why in the last couple 
 months, both the NAACP’s national convention and the Black Lives Matter 
 movement have called for a moratorium on charter school growth, noting that 
 the privatization of the nation’s schools was a major social justice 
 concern. As the NAACP noted in its resolution, which has to be formally 
 approved by the NAACP’s national board, “…weak oversight of charter 
 schools puts students and communities at risk of harm, public funds at risk 
 of being wasted, and further erodes local control of public 
 education.”\nAnd even if some of the charter schools Fisher champions 
 have been a success, she’s secretly supported efforts that critics regard 
 as undermining the success of the public school system and teachers. A 
 recent investigation by California Hedge Clippers, a coalition of community 
 groups and unions, found that Fisher was one of a number of wealthy 
 Californians who in 2012 used a dark money network involving out-of-state 
 organizations linked to the conservative Koch brothers to shield their 
 donations to controversial campaign efforts that year. The money was used 
 to oppose Proposition 30, a tax on high-income Californians to fund public 
 schools and public safety, and support Proposition 32, which, among other 
 things, would have severely limited the ability of organized labor, 
 including teachers unions, to raise money for state and local races.\nAt 
 the time of the campaign, none of these donations were public. In fact, 
 fellow charter-school advocate Eli Broad publically endorsed Proposition 30 
 while secretly donating $500,000 to the dark money fund dedicated to 
 defeating it. And Fisher herself had close ties to Governor Jerry Brown, a 
 key proponent of Proposition 30. Brown’s wife Anne Gust Brown worked as 
 chief administrative officer at the Gap until 2005 and is credited with 
 helping to improve the company’s labor standards, and the Fishers were 
 major financial supporters of Brown’s 2014 campaign to pass Proposition 
 1, the water bond, and Proposition 2, the “rainy day budget” 
 stabilization act.\n“I would imagine that it caused some domestic 
 strife,” says Karen Wolfe, a California parent and founder of PSconnect, 
 a community group that advocates for traditional public schools. “[Anne 
 likely] thought she had the Fishers’ support on her husband’s crowning 
 achievement, a tax to finally balance California’s budget and bring the 
 state out of functional bankruptcy. This was absolutely his highest 
 priority.”\nIn total, according to the Hedge Clippers investigation, 
 Fisher and her sons donated more than $18 million to the dark money group.  
 It wasn’t the only time the Fisher family has worked with political 
 organizations known for concealing their financial supporters. In 2006, 
 current KIPP chairman John Fisher gave $85,000 to All Children Matter, a 
 school-privatization political action group in Ohio that was slapped with a 
 record-setting $5.2 million fine for illegally funneling contributions 
 through out-of-state dark money networks. Instead of paying the fine, All 
 Children Matter shut down and one of its conservative founders launched a 
 new group: the Alliance for School Choice, which in 2011 listed John Fisher 
 as its secretary. And last year, Doris Fisher contributed $750,000 to 
 California Charter School Association Advocates, which funneled such 
 donations to a local committee. The names of individual donors wouldn’t 
 be disclosed until after the election.\nDespite the dark money group’s 
 best efforts, Proposition 30 passed and Proposition 32 failed. As a result, 
 according to the Hedge Clippers report, KIPP schools in California that 
 Fisher had long championed received nearly $5 million in Proposition 30 
 taxpayer funding in the 2013-2014 school year.\n“What outrageous 
 hypocrisy that she and her cabal profess to be all about the interests of 
 quality education of low-income communities of color, and yet behind the 
 scenes are undercutting one of the most important policies to fund public 
 education we have seen in decades,” says Amy Schur, state campaign 
 director for the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, part 
 of the Hedge Clipper coalition, which is advocating for the extension of 
 the Proposition 30 tax at the ballot box this November.\nTo critics, such 
 findings suggest that Fisher and other deep-pocketed advocates currently 
 pumping millions into California politics to promote their charter-school 
 agenda are ignoring the sorts of fundamental financial reforms that could 
 make a difference for struggling schoolchildren but would hurt their bottom 
 lines.\n“These people are looking at inequality and saying, ‘These 
 people do not have sufficient education,’ when there are other issues 
 regarding the structure of the economy that would more directly impact the 
 poor,” says Harold Meyerson, executive editor of theAmerican Prospect. 
 “It’s nice the Waltons and the Fisher family are concerned about the 
 poor with regards to the quality of their education, but a more direct way 
 to help them would be to give workers at Walmart and the Gap a raise and to 
 give them more hours.”\nBorn Doris Feigenbaum in 1931 in New York, Fisher 
 and her husband struck modern-day gold in San Francisco when they founded 
 the first Gap store there in 1969. By all indications, Doris and her 
 husband, who passed away in 2009, worked hand in hand building the 
 brand.\nThe result was a $16-billion business with more than 3,700 stores 
 worldwide. While Gap Inc. recently received attention for being among the 
 first major brands to voluntarily increase the minimum wage of its U.S. 
 workforce, like many global retailers, it has also faced intense scrutiny 
 for its labor practices, such as the poor working conditions of its factory 
 workers overseas.\nEven after the company released “Sourcing Principles 
 and Guidelines” in response to such critiques in 1993, the company was 
 publically cited for factory condition violations six times in the 
 following 14 years. Indeed, just two years after the guidelines were 
 issued, New York Times columnist Bob Herbert offered this withering 
 observation:\n“The hundreds of thousands of young (and mostly female) 
 factory workers in Central America who earn next to nothing and often live 
 in squalor have been an absolute boon to American clothing company 
 executives like Donald G. Fisher, the chief executive of the Gap and Banana 
 Republic empire, who lives in splendor and paid himself more than $2 
 million last year.”\n2013 report exposed abusive working conditions in a 
 Bangladeshi factory that made clothes for The Gap.\n2013 report exposed 
 abusive working conditions in a Bangladeshi factory that made clothes for 
 The Gap.\nStung by the negative publicity, the Gap launched an effort to 
 crack down on labor abuses that won widespread praise. But the problems did 
 not go away. In 2007, the Gap found itself embroiled in a child labor 
 controversyafter the British paper The Observer reported that children as 
 young as 10  were working for up to 16 hours a day to make clothes, 
 including items with Gap labels. To contain the damage, the company 
 announced a set of measures to eliminate the use of child labor. But in 
 2013, The Gap once again made headlines — this time for selling clothes 
 manufactured in a Bangladesh sweatshop where workers were allegedly made to 
 work 100 hours per week and cheated on wages that averaged 20 to 24 cents 
 per hour.\nThe Fishers’ experiences with the Gap may well have shaped 
 their involvement in education reform, which began in 2000 when they 
 learned about Mike Feinberg and Dave Levin. The two Teach for America alums 
 had launched the first two KIPP charter schools, one in Houston and one in 
 the South Bronx, designed around high expectations, extended school days 
 and performance-driven results. “[The Fishers] liked the notion that 
 careful training and well-constructed, on-the-job experience, as they had 
 done in their company, could produce better school leaders,” says 
 Washington Post education writer Jay Mathews, author of a book on KIPP, 
 Work Hard. Be Nice.\nAnd it’s why when Scott Hamilton, the charter school 
 expert the couple had hired to find education projects, suggested they work 
 to scale up Feinberg and Levin’s program, they agreed, spending $15 
 million to create the KIPP Foundation to train people on how to launch new 
 KIPP schools. Soon KIPP was spreading across the country the way Gap stores 
 did in malls from coast to coast. Along with donating more money to KIPP, 
 the Fishers also gave money to Teach for America, which became a major 
 source of KIPP’s teachers. “[Don] used what he learned in growing Gap 
 Inc. to show us what we could do in public education, and tens of thousands 
 of children have benefited from his commitment and generosity,” notes 
 KIPP Foundation CEO Richard Barth in Donald Fisher’s Gap biography.\nKIPP 
 is considered by many experts to be a success story. “You can make good 
 arguments that many charters are disappointing, but not KIPP,” says 
 Matthews. “It is the most studied charter school system by far, and all 
 of those independent studies, particularly a big one by Mathematica, show 
 that KIPP raises achievement significantly higher than regular schools for 
 similar kids in similar neighborhoods, even in a randomized study.”\nBut 
 not everyone is thrilled by KIPP’s approach. In 2012, a study led by 
 Julian Vasquez Heilig, then faculty in the University of Texas at Austin 
 College of Education’s Department of Educational Administration, found 
 that despite KIPP’s claims that 88 to 90 percent of their students went 
 to college, black high school students were much more likely to leave KIPP 
 and other urban charter schools in Texas than they were to leave 
 traditional urban public schools. And in New York City, the other place 
 where KIPP got its start, math teacher and education blogger Gary 
 Rubinstein found that in 2012-2013, the three KIPP schools that have 
 kindergartens posted lower 3rd grade test scores than two-thirds of the 
 other charter schools in the city. And despite KIPP’s public standing, 
 it’s not always transparent about its operations. Earlier this year the 
 Center for Media and Democracy found that the organization claimed 
 information about its graduation and matriculation rates, student 
 performance results and how it would spend taxpayer dollars was 
 “proprietary,” leading the U.S. Department of Education to redact this 
 information from KIPP application documents before they were released to 
 the public.\nKIPP has also been criticized for its schools’ tendency to 
 “churn and burn” young teachers because of long, demanding workdays (a 
 third of KIPP teachers left their jobs in the 2012-2013 school year). 
 Similarly, Teach for America, which funnels many of its teachers to KIPP 
 schools, has faced increasing scrutiny for supplanting qualified teaching 
 veterans with poorly trained replacements in struggling communities that 
 are most in need of qualified instructors.\nSome critics wonder if the 
 Fishers’ background is in part responsible for such circumstances.\n“If 
 you look at the industries where these people made their wealth, you can 
 see why they have this idea that you have to squeeze labor to make your 
 profits,” says Cynthia Liu, founder of K-12 News Network and a charter 
 school critic. “If you have children in India making your clothing, your 
 profit margin is very large. Similarly, if you use automation and low-cost 
 education ‘shock troops’ to minimize the role of teachers, making them 
 the ‘guide on the side rather than the sage on the stage,’ you minimize 
 your education labor costs.”\nThe result, says Liu, isn’t just poorly 
 trained and overworked teachers, it’s undervalued students. “When 
 charters rely on the churn of an expendable, fungible teaching workforce 
 using scripted curriculum instead of career and authentically-credentialed 
 teachers, it cheapens the learning experience for students and the 
 profession,” she says. “A child’s education isn’t a five dollar 
 T-shirt, it’s an investment in our future collective well-being.”\nPLAN 
 TO RELOCATE BAYVIEW CHARTER SCHOOL MEETS WITH RESISTANCE\nSchool district 
 wants to move KIPP elementary to vacant Treasure Island school 
 site\nhttps://www.sfexaminer.com/news/plan-to-relocate-bayview-charter-school-meets-with-resistance/\nJOSHUA 
 SABATINI\n\nFeb. 19, 2020 5:00 p.m.\n\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.\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.\nThe co-location has led to a space squeeze, 
 school officials said.\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.\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.\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.\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“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.”\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“They are taking up space at Malcolm X and basically 
 preventing growth at that school,” Walton said.\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.\nHealth Over Profits!" Where The Hell Is OSHA 
 At? Oakland Speak-out For Health Safety On The 
 Job\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bKdXrJm4I4\nNorthern California 
 workers spoke out at the Cal-OSHA offices on June 1 about the failure of 
 Cal-OSHA to have any health and safety inspectors. There are less than 200 
 inspectors in California and many of them. are over  60 and unable to do 
 physical inspections. The rally called for the hiring of 1,000 inspectors 
 and for criminal prosecution against bosses who fire workers in retaliation 
 for making health and safety complaints. The protest also was part of the 
 massive protests against the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The 
 speakers also discussed the fact that frontline workers who are bearing the 
 brunt of covid are forced to work without proper PPE and when they call 
 OSHA it is ignored and they are also retaliated against. Speakers from 
 Tesla, San Francisco General Hospital, Highland Hospital, UCSC and Gig 
 workers. This caravan and rallies were part of national actions by the 
 People's Strike.\nAdditional media: Black Workers Unite Covid-19 & Black 
 Workers Under Attack On The Front Lines In City of San Francisco 
 https://youtu.be/SBB3yF43Crk Life & Death For CA Workers & The Criminal 
 Negligence Of CA Gov Newsom  With  Former CA-OSHA Medical Director  Dr. 
 Larry Rose https://youtu.be/Bi6x_93MuQM Nurses, Covid-19, The Healthcare 
 Crisis & Defending Public Health With NNU-CNA Pres. Deborah Burger R.N. 
 https://youtu.be/hmZHsfSLZ_A COVID-19 & SF DPH SEIU 1021 Community 
 Healthcare Centers Workers Under Attack: Safety & Health Under Threat 
 https://youtu.be/IkwCxhGD31c SEIU 1021 Nurses at ZSFGH alleging 
 understaffing leaves patients at risk 
 http://www.sfexaminer.com/nurses-sfgh-alleging-understaffing-leaves-patients-risk/ 
 The Death March, Slavery, Meat Plant Workers & Covid-19 
 https://youtu.be/zZkwe4kkYMQ New Orleans Sanitation Workers Strike For  
 Justice/Human Rights & Are Replaced By Convicts 
 https://youtu.be/UaJE5o1-4MI Jail Tesla Billionaire Elon Musk & Defend 
 Health & Safety: Workers Speak Out At Tesla Fremont Plant 
 https://youtu.be/GBB5y5Q6cZI Black Workers Unite Covid-19 & Black Workers 
 Under Attack On The Front Lines In City of San Francisco 
 https://youtu.be/SBB3yF43Crk Nurses, Covid-19, The Healthcare Crisis & 
 Defending Public Health With NNU-CNA Pres. Deborah Burger R.N. 
 https://youtu.be/hmZHsfSLZ_A COVID-19 & SF DPH SEIU 1021 Community 
 Healthcare Centers Workers Under Attack: Safety & Health Under Threat 
 https://youtu.be/IkwCxhGD31c SEIU 1021 Nurses at ZSFGH alleging 
 understaffing leaves patients at risk 
 http://www.sfexaminer.com/nurses-sfgh-alleging-understaffing-leaves-patients-risk/ 
 The Death March, Slavery, Meat Plant Workers & Covid-19 
 https://youtu.be/zZkwe4kkYMQ New Orleans Sanitation Workers Strike For  
 Justice/Human Rights & Are Replaced By Convicts 
 https://youtu.be/UaJE5o1-4MIAdditional Media: Labor Video Project 
 www.laborvideo.org\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“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.”\nBut one of the concerns 
 raised by the board was how would Bayview families get to the 
 school.\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.”\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“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.\nShe said the TIDA vote postponement “gives us an opportunity to 
 provide further clarification.”\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.\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.\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“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.”\nThose from the public who spoke at last week’s hearing raised 
 another issue.\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.\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“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.”\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/07/01/18834794.php
SUMMARY:Commemorate Bloody Thursday At SSA-STOP Racist Attacks On Docks & Fisher Racist Privatiza
LOCATION:SSA\n1717 Middle Harbor Rd, Oakland, CA 94607
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/07/01/18834794.php
DTSTART:20200705T170000Z
DTEND:20200705T190000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
