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DESCRIPTION:1/11/21 All Out To Stop Systemic Racism In City & County  Of San 
 Francisco\nFire SF Health Service System  Chief Operating Officer Mitch 
 Griggs NOW!  \nReturn All Fired Workers To Their Jobs  And Full 
 Compensation For Terminated Black City Employees\n\nPress 
 Conference\nMonday January 11, 2020 12 Noon\nSF Health Service System\n945 
 Market St.\nSan Francisco\n\nPhysical Distancing At Press Conference\n\nSan 
 Franciscoo Health System Service Chief Operating Officer Mitch Griggs has a 
 record of terrorrizing and\nbullying Black employees in this agency. He has 
  driven Black employees out of the agency including Malia Alim and other 
 Black workers.\nNot only has racist Mitch retaliated against Black 
 employeees at the agency but has actually retaliated against Black 
 employees and whistleblowers from other agencies such as Valerie 
 Taybron\nwho blew the whistle at MTA and was illegally retaliated against 
 and then faced retaliation by the Health Service System when she tried to 
 retire. Abbie Yant who is the CEO has also condoned this activity.\nWe 
 demand that Mitch be fired now and also there be a criminal investigation 
 against Griggs and other officials who illlegally colluded to discriminate 
 and retaliatate against Black employees.\nWe call on District Attorney 
 Chesa Boundin to investigate and prosocute these and other criminals at the 
 Department of Human Resources who illegally forged documents to undermine 
 Black employees who were illegally retaliated against because of their 
 race. Mayor London Breed should be supporting this action. \nLast year 
 hundreds of Black and other employees testified about the racist attacks 
 both verbally and even physically against themselves. None of these workers 
 have beene re-instated by the City of San Francisco and in fact the racist 
 attacks have even escalated during the Covid-19 pandemic when Black and 
 Brown employees have been put on the front lines without proper PPE and 
 also not been allowed to work online as fellow employees were.\nThe 
 Department of Human Resources HR and top City Managers and politicians 
 continue to allow these blatant violations of human lives and basic 
 rights.\nThe SF Supervisors have also voted unaimously to approve 
 settlements of over $130 million to workers and tens of millions nore to 
 City lawyers for illegal actions by City managers\nIncluding racist 
 discrimination, corruption and malfeasance without demanding that the 
 managers who violated the law are fired and prosecuted for these actions. 
 \nInstead these managers and executives  have been promoted and allowed to 
 retire with full City pensions. This has to STOP NOW!\n\nIniiated by\nSF 
 Bay View Newspaper\nhttps://sfbayview.com\nUnited Front Committee For A 
 Labor Party\nhttps://foramasslaborparty.wordpress.com\nHigher Education 
 Action Team HEAT CCSF\nUnited Public Workers For Action UPWA.info\n\nFor 
 information:\n (669) 216-6104‬, ‭(415) 533-5642‬\n\nAdditional 
 media:\n\nBlack S.F. employees file racial discrimination lawsuit against 
 city\nMallory Moench Dec. 10, 2020 Updated: Dec. 10, 2020 9:17 
 a.m.\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/.../Black-S-F-employees-file...\n\nAlicia 
 Williams, a licensed vocational nurse with the San Francisco Department of 
 Public Health, found this note in an employee-only area of Laguna Honda 
 Hospital on Jan. 8. Williams said the city’s office of Equal Employment 
 Opportunity could not identify a perpetrator after an investigation. 
 Williams filed a class action lawsuit with two other Black city employees 
 alleging racial discrimination on Dec. 9.\n\nThree Black San Francisco 
 employees filed a class-action lawsuit Wednesday against the city, accusing 
 agencies of failing to provide Black workers with equal employment 
 opportunities and prevent discrimination.\nThe plaintiffs work in the 
 Municipal Transportation Agency, the Department of Public Health and the 
 Public Utilities Commission. The lawsuit alleges they were paid less than 
 non-Black colleagues, denied promotions due to their race and subjected to 
 racist comments, harassment and treatment, including an anonymous note that 
 called one a “monkey.”\n“My morale is in the gutter,” said 
 plaintiff Keka Robinson-Luqman, an SFMTA employee who said she has been the 
 victim of racist remarks and unequal pay. Lower income has hindered her and 
 husband, an agency bus operator, from saving enough to buy a house and 
 putting their daughter in full-time preschool, she said.\n“The most 
 bothersome to me about all of this is that it’s consistently ongoing,” 
 she said. “Colleagues who have been there 20-plus years explain almost 
 the same exact issues that I’m going through. Nothing is changing ... 
 This needs to stop.”\nJohn Coté, spokesman for the city attorney, said 
 privacy protections in personnel matters limit what the agency could 
 publicly say, adding it would address the case in court.\n“The City takes 
 equal employment issues very seriously and is committed to fostering a 
 welcoming workplace free of discrimination or harassment,” Coté 
 said.\nThe class-action lawsuit filed in the Superior Court of California 
 in San Francisco follows racial discrimination suits from a former 
 firefighter and engineer in July and eight health department workers in 
 October, as city agencies have intensified discussions about systemic 
 racism. The city founded an Office of Racial Equity last year and produced 
 a workforce report in March that highlighted data that showed “serious 
 disparities between demographic groups, particularly along racial lines.” 
 Black employees held lower-paying jobs, were less likely to be promoted and 
 were more frequently disciplined and fired, the report said.\nAn SFMTA 
 report last month also revealed that Black employees were 
 disproportionately subject to discipline.\nSFMTA director Jeffrey Tumlin 
 said the agency has a “history of racism” against its own workforce. In 
 the latest scandal, a Black employee who sued the agency for passing her up 
 for a promotion after reporting harassment was also the victim of a forged 
 settlement by a manager who has since resigned.\n“I understand firsthand 
 why more Black employees are unsuccessful in resolving issues in the city, 
 because the processes and practices, the way that they are currently, are 
 set up to work against Black employees,” said Dante King, a founding 
 member of the city’s Black Employee Alliance, who worked for human 
 resources and SFMTA and is now at the health department. “It’s set up 
 to create a narrative and a facade that San Francisco is inclusive and is a 
 model city for anti-racism. It is not.”\nSFMTA spokeswoman Kristen 
 Holland said the agency has implemented implicit bias training for the past 
 few years and recently created a racial equity office and 90-step racial 
 equity action plan that the board will consider for final approval next 
 week.\n“The agency takes seriously its significant responsibility to its 
 almost 6,000 employees to have a workplace free from bias and 
 discrimination,” she said.\nBlack people make up 15% of the city’s 
 workforce, with 54% of the city’s Black employees concentrated in the 
 three departments represented by plaintiffs, according to the workforce 
 report. The report showed that white employees are nearly twice as likely 
 to be in management positions as Black employees. White managers are paid 
 an average hourly wage of $78.86 compared to $60.75 for Black 
 managers.\nFormer San Francisco firefighter, engineer sue city for 
 racial...\nThe lawsuit also alleged that the human resources department 
 failed to thoroughly investigate discrimination complaints. Last year, 32% 
 of equal employment opportunities complaints were filed by Black employees, 
 according to city data. Five of 579 complaints lodged last year were 
 sustained, eight resulted in harassment prevention training and seven in 
 discipline.\nThe three plaintiffs in Wednesday’s lawsuits had filed 
 complaints. Plaintiff Alicia Williams, a licensed vocational nurse with the 
 health department, found a note in an employee-only area of Laguna Honda 
 Hospital that read “Alicia the monkey, black monkey” on Jan. 8. The 
 city’s Equal Employment Opportunity office investigated, but officials 
 told her they couldn’t identify the perpetrator, the lawsuit 
 said.\nWilliams, who started working for the city in 2001, alleged 
 discrimination and abuse from different white supervisors. She was fired in 
 2012 for “insubordination” and “damaging city property,” but 
 reinstated in 2014 after an arbitrator determined that her manager’s 
 actions were “racially tinged.”\nThe lawsuit alleges that Williams was 
 more recently denied accommodation granted to white co-workers to take 
 registered nurse classes, which would have helped her get a promotion, and 
 subjected to disciplinary actions without asking her side of the 
 story.\nThe second plaintiff, Robinson-Luqman, a junior management 
 assistant in the board of directors division for the SFMTA since 2016, 
 alleged that her white manager used racist and stereotypical language with 
 her. She said that during a time when Muni was rocked by harassment 
 complaints, her manager told her on more than one occasion that the 
 situation had improved since “they used to do things like hang nooses at 
 the office here.”\nIn 2018 and 2019, Robinson-Luqman said that her 
 manager left or did not attend racial equity trainings, telling her she 
 “was tired of hearing about what white people did to Black people” and 
 had “real work to do.”\nRobinson-Luqman said she has performed tasks 
 above her civil service class without adequate compensation, despite having 
 more education than a higher-level non-Black employee. This year, she 
 applied for a promotion to board secretary, but didn’t get it even though 
 she said she now performs many of those duties. Her discrimination 
 complaint filed in February was initially assigned to Rebecca Sherman — 
 who resigned after forging a settlement in response to another Black 
 employee’s complaint — and then passed along to another officer, with 
 no conclusion yet, she said.\nThe third plaintiff, John Hill, has worked as 
 a laborer for the Public Utilities Commission since 1991. The lawsuit 
 alleges that Hill was repeatedly denied promotions given to non-Black 
 employees with lower seniority and inferior marks on civil service exams. 
 Once, he was passed up for the family member of a retiring white 
 supervisor, the lawsuit said.\nThe lawsuit asks for a preliminary 
 injunction to stop the city from engaging in discrimination and adjust 
 wages and benefits for plaintiffs. It also demands that the court require 
 the city to rewrite its policies and better train its human resources 
 department.\n“Even though the leadership has in some instances admitted 
 to a history of racism, that’s not even half the battle,” said Felicia 
 Medina, a partner with Medina Orthwein LLP, one of two law firms 
 representing the plaintiffs. “We’re seeking both truth and 
 reconciliation, and we want to be able to monitor the changes that we want 
 to see.”\nEditor’s note: A previous version of this article misstated 
 the name of a the city agency. It is the Office of Racial Equity.\nMallory 
 Moench is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: 
 mallory.moench@sfchronicle.com Twitter:@mallorymoench\n\nRacist practices 
 at the SF Health Service System will no longer be tolerated: Remove 
 Mitchell Griggs 
 now!\nhttps://sfbayview.com/2020/12/racist-practices-at-the-sf-health-service-system-will-no-longer-be-tolerated-remove-mitchell-griggs-now\n\nDecember 
 22, 2020\n\nOn the right is San Francisco Health Service System Executive 
 Director Abbie Yant. The Health Service System hired Malika Alim, on the 
 left, as a file clerk, then assigned her to supervise other clerks and 
 serve as office manager without a promotion or a pay increase. While Malika 
 waited for a small reclassification that never came, 16 percent of the 
 staff were promoted, reclassified or hired. Civil Rights Attorney Angela 
 Alioto says racism is rampant in all City departments.\nby Malik 
 Washington\n\nAs the new editor of the San Francisco Bay View National 
 Black Newspaper I have a plethora of responsibilities; one such task is 
 screening incoming mail for breaking news and whistleblower reports. I 
 recently had a stack of mail on my desk and decided to take it home for the 
 weekend in order to read the contents thoroughly.\n\nI was shocked to find 
 an envelope addressed to the editor and marked “confidential and 
 protected.” What I discovered not only angered me but turned my stomach. 
 Within the envelope was a plea for help from an employee of the City’s 
 Health Service System. It detailed the actions of a specific department and 
 a specific supervisor who has employed racist strategies and tactics in his 
 capacity as an employee of the city government. What really drew my ire was 
 the obvious complicity of the city’s Human Resources Department, which 
 has basically aided and abetted the actions of this wayward city 
 employee.\n\nThe Health Service System has a long history of retaliation 
 against employees of color. In October of 2020, a federal lawsuit was filed 
 in San Francisco against systemic racism in the City and County. Civil 
 Rights Attorney Angela Alioto is representing more than 50 workers who have 
 been discriminated against because of their race.\n\nUpon receiving this 
 letter, I contacted Steve Zeltzer who is the host of Work Week, a radio 
 program which airs every Thursday between 12 noon and 2 p.m. on KPOO 
 89.5FM. My mentor, Mary Ratcliff, suggested that I contact Steve and ask 
 him his thoughts on the matter before me. Steve first instructed me to find 
 out if I could contact any of the current or former employees who had been 
 victimized by this racist city employee. I began to make phone calls and it 
 did not take long before I found someone who was willing to talk on the 
 record.\n\nMalika Alim is a former employee of the Health Service System in 
 San Francisco. She is a Black woman and over the age of 50. That detail is 
 relevant because targeting older Black employees has been a favored tactic 
 of the racist supervisor in question. I am sure many of you want to know 
 who this racist employee is, so I will reveal his identity now. His name is 
 Mitchell Griggs. Griggs is a white male who hails from North Carolina and 
 he is the chief operating officer (COO). Griggs has focused his racist and 
 demeaning practices specifically on employees who work in the Member 
 Services and Operations Department.\n\nMalika worked as a file clerk and 
 was directed by Griggs to perform supervisory functions. She was assigned 
 two file clerks as subordinates who reported to her. Malika was ordered to 
 work as the office manager and to oversee facilities.\n\nMalika asked for a 
 reclassification and promotion in order to reflect her additional job 
 duties as well as her supervisory role that her previous supervisor, 
 Seretha Gallarad, forwarded to Griggs before Seretha was pushed out and 
 terminated by Abbie Yant, the executive director of HSS, who has promoted, 
 condoned and sanctioned the racist and hostile work environment 
 there.\n\nAfter Seretha left the San Francisco Health Service System, 
 Malika reported directly to Griggs. Malika repeatedly emailed Griggs about 
 her promotion request and asked to speak to him. In over one year’s time, 
 COO Mitchell Griggs never responded to her emails and never met with her to 
 discuss her promotion.\n\nMalika witnessed Seretha, her former supervisor, 
 being forced out by Griggs and Yant. Malika understood clearly that Griggs 
 would continue to force her to work at a higher classification and continue 
 to have her perform supervisory duties that were inherited from 
 Gallarad.\n\nMalika knew she was not going to be compensated for the extra 
 work. As she waited for her reclassification, she watched three white 
 employees receive promotions to higher classifications. Two white employees 
 were promoted into new jobs and new positions created by the Health Service 
 System.\n\nIn an office of 50 employees, 16 percent of the staff were 
 promoted, reclassified or hired while Malika waited for a small 
 reclassification that never came. After four years of faithful service to 
 the City of San Francisco Malik was blocked from advancing by Mitchell 
 Griggs. The discrimination left Malika with no further choice and she left 
 a secure union job with health benefits and a pension at the Health Service 
 System. Malika’s story is not the exception; it is the norm.\n\nIt 
 didn’t take long before I decided to reach out to Sheryl Davis, the 
 director of the San Francisco Human Rights Commission. Sheryl was appalled 
 at the information I shared with her and she vowed to contact the proper 
 officials and initiate an internal investigation. Ms. Davis did not make 
 any promises, but she did say that she would do her best. Lately I have 
 been talking about PRINCIPLED BLACK LEADERSHIP. In my opinion, Sheryl Davis 
 is a principled Black leader and I believe that eventually our Mayor London 
 Breed will begin to clean house.\n\nAs a respected media source, it is our 
 duty to report on active racial discrimination that is going on in San 
 Francisco. The Black Employee Alliance has been calling on our sisters and 
 brothers to report this ongoing racism to the public but I can tell you 
 that City employees of color are afraid of losing their jobs. This is an 
 exceptionally dangerous time in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic and I 
 think racist supervisors like Mitchell Griggs know this and use it to their 
 advantage.\n\nAfter years of racism against Black employees, the San 
 Francisco Health Service System must answer questions about their 
 prejudicial treatment of employees of color. We must hold them publicly 
 accountable so that everyone knows how they are treating our sisters and 
 brothers.\n\nManagement at HSS is white and they use white privilege to 
 discriminate against employees of color by firing them, disciplining them, 
 forcing them out, and failing or refusing to promote them. The work 
 environment is hostile and oppressive.\n\nThe employees cannot address 
 racism in the workplace or they will be retaliated against. HSS management 
 has already fired or pushed a large number of the Black employees. Many 
 times you will hear me say that there is an “advanced gentrification 
 program” being implemented here within the City of San Francisco. This is 
 a part of the program. I need all of you to stay WOKE. With that said, I 
 want to illustrate another example of Mitchell Griggs and Abbie Yant’s 
 overt racist and devious practices.\n\nI spoke to Civil Rights Attorney 
 Angela Alioto about the plaintiffs in her case as well as the investigation 
 I am performing in regard to this case and she said: “There is systemic 
 racism in every single City and County department in San 
 Francisco.”\n\nMs. Alioto went on further to describe the situation with 
 a few of her clients: “I am representing three plaintiffs from the San 
 Francisco Sheriff’s Office. They were given a cease and desist order by 
 the City Attorney’s Office. My clients were told that they could not talk 
 to anyone on the job for a year and a half. The sheriff was running a 
 virtual prison for their own employees who had complained of racial 
 discrimination.”\n\nI asked Ms. Alioto if District Attorney Chesa Boudin 
 had any authority over these racist practices and she said that he did have 
 some authority but was not aware whether he had gotten involved or 
 not.\n\nI also was able to reach former Health Service System employee 
 Seretha Gallarad. I mentioned Seretha earlier in this article. She is a 
 Black woman over the age of 50 with a daughter in college she supports. 
 Seretha worked for the City of San Francisco for nine years before she was 
 forced to resign from the Health Service System.\n\nIronically, Seretha was 
 the office’s liaison for the City’s whistleblower program, yet she was 
 forced out for reporting the wrongdoing she had witnessed. Seretha was 
 hired by previous Executive Director Cathy Dodd. When Cathy left HSS in 
 2017, Mitchell Griggs became Seretha’s manager and acting executive 
 director. After he was appointed, he targeted her for termination.\n\nWhat 
 was extremely troubling was that when Seretha sent confidential emails to 
 Human Resources (HR) about her mistreatment by Mitchell Griggs, Griggs was 
 copied! Attorney Angela Alioto said that this a common practice which has 
 proven to place employees in harm’s way.\n\nWithout Seretha’s 
 knowledge, Mitchell Griggs worked with the HR representative to restructure 
 her position that former Executive Director Cathy Dodd had created in order 
 to disqualify her from her own job, constructively firing her. Seretha did 
 not want to lose her job; but Griggs, the chief operating officer, fixed it 
 so she had no alternative but to leave.\n\nI spoke with Seretha on the 
 phone, and she remembered the time that she met Abbie Yant and her husband. 
 Seretha said: “I always suspected that Abbie Yant was a racist. But when 
 I met her husband, my suspicions were confirmed. He wouldn’t even touch 
 my hand when I offered it for a handshake.” And this was prior to the 
 pandemic!\n\nWe will be following up on this discrimination and corruption 
 within City and County departments. At this time, I send out a call for aid 
 and support from Mega Black San Francisco as well as San Francisco Black 
 Wallstreet. What is the sense in having all these organizations and groups 
 if we do not actively support our people when they need us the most. We 
 must combine our resources and help our people fight against this virulent 
 racism within the City and County government.\n\nSteve Zeltzer of Work Week 
 on KPOO 89.5FM will be delving into this specific case on an upcoming show 
 and he has invited me to join the panel of guests. I can tell you that on 
 this upcoming show you will hear Malika Alim in her own words as she 
 describes the horrible racist work environment at the San Francisco Health 
 Service System. Please stay tuned as we will be following up on this story 
 in upcoming issues of the San Francisco Bay View National Black Newspaper. 
 If we do not stand up for our people, who will?\n\nDare to Struggle, Dare 
 to Win, All Power to the People!\n\nBay View Editor Malik Washington can be 
 reached at Malik@sfbayview.com. Contact him whenever you see news 
 happening. Please visit our website, sfbayview.com, read and share the 
 knowledge, wisdom and understanding and Black culture contained in our one 
 of a kind national Black newspaper.         \n\nCAPTION: The San Francisco 
 Health Service System hired Malika Alim as a file clerk, then assigned her 
 to function as supervisor and office manager without a promotion or a pay 
 increase.\n\n\nCCSF Black Workers & Trade Union Supporters Speak Out At SF 
 City Hall Against Systemic Racism And 
 Corruption\nhttps://youtu.be/rVZ7zyc4gjY\n\nCCSF Black Workers & Supporters 
 Speak Out At SF City Hall Against Systemic Racism And 
 Corruption\nhttps://youtu.be/rVZ7zyc4gjY\n\nSF HR director claims ‘rogue 
 employee’ forged settlement with Black 
 worker\nhttps://missionlocal.org/.../bombshell-san-francisco.../...\n\nEmail 
 explains ‘terrible decisions’ behind SF HR manager forging 
 deal\nRebecca Sherman afraid to side with Black city worker on 
 claims\nhttps://www.sfexaminer.com/.../email-explains.../...\n\nMICHAEL 
 BARBA\nUnion Busting, Union Rights, Racism, Covid/PPE & Healthcare Workers 
 With SEIU 1021 SF  Local 
 Leaders\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MxyTGFLtu0\n\nReign Of Terror 
 Against SF SEIU 1021 DPH Members & Other City Workers: Speakout At SF Labor 
 Council\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JN-f8HeN3w&t=7s\n\nSEIU 1021 SFGH 
 Workers Speakout! Stop Racism, Union Busting & Privatization Of SFGH 
 Pharmacy\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1XzRrzB9ZI\n\nRacism, 
 Outsourcing and Retaliation At SF Civil Service Commission With HR Director 
 Micki Callahan\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqNhPRQeHGk&t=34s\n\nOn Day 
 Before Women’s Day, SF City Workers Rally & Speak Out Against 
 Discrimination, Racism, Privatization & 
 Outsourcing\nhttps://youtu.be/GeBcv4rFZfM\n\nSF General Hospital Workers 
 Fed Up With Short Staffing Threatening Patient Safety While Millions  Go 
 For Outsourcing\nhttps://youtu.be/2-mA-9oVb-M\n\nStop The Attacks! SEIU 
 1021 Members Speak Out At CCSF Civil Service Commission On Retaliation & 
 Discrimination\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMZJlCt--t0&t=6s\n\nRacism, 
 Outsourcing, ​and Retaliation At SF Civil Service Commission With HR 
 Director Micki Callahan\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqNhPRQeHGk\n\nAt 
 a hearing of the San Francisco Civil Service Commission on December 17, 
 2918,  the issue of racism, outsourcing and retaliation came to the fore. 
 The Commission which is charged with making sure that the Human Resources 
 Department carries out its work has allowed HR Director Micki Callahan to 
 retaliate against whistleblowers.  \n\nStop The Racist Terror Against 
 African American Workers-Speakout At SF BOS Special 
 Meeting\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkoYXzKO_so&t=537s\n\nSF SEIU 1021 
 Rank & File Leaders/Members Speak Out Against Racism At BOS 
 Meeting\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XHt2wbvOD4&t=89s\n\nWorkers Speak 
 Out At SF Supervisor’s 
 Meeting\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-kmrjrxvF4&t=275s\n\nSFGH 
 "Zuckerberg" SEIU 1021 Workers & Community Protest DPH Privatization, 
 Racism & Union Busting\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpxZcETKB6o\n\nStop 
 Racist Discrimination And Workplace Bullying At SF DPH! SEIU 1021 Members & 
 SF Residents Rally & Speakout\nhttps://youtu.be/iNs4zHn96rI\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/01/05/18839217.php
SUMMARY:Rally Press Conf To Stop Systemic Racism In City/County Of San Francisco
LOCATION:San Francisco Health Service System\n945 Market St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/01/05/18839217.php
DTSTART:20210111T200000Z
DTEND:20210111T210000Z
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