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DESCRIPTION:On December 14, 2021, District 3 Supervisor Aaron Peskin tweeted “We're 
 putting Recall Reform on the June 2022 ballot. Taxpayers should not be 
 forced to spend millions to recall officials who were just elected or are 
 up for re-election in the same year. Thx to co-sponsors @shamannwalton 
 @HillaryRonen @DeanPreston @conniechansf @myrnamelgar!” This tweet was 
 soon followed by a Chronicle story about the various measures up for the 
 June 2022 election – one of four we get to participate in this year!\nAs 
 the Chronicle reported, “Supervisor Aaron Peskin wants to change how 
 vacancies on the Board of Supervisors, Board of Education, and Community 
 College District Board of Trustees are filled. Currently, the mayor 
 appoints replacements in the middle of an election cycle. Peskin wants to 
 instead have a majority of each board’s members appoint a replacement to 
 fill a vacant seat — for example, leaving the power to pick a temporary 
 new colleague up to supervisors.” \n\nThe amendment will also limit 
 recalls to officials who have served in office for at least 12 months, up 
 from the current six months. It will prohibit the submission of recall 
 petitions within 18 months of a regularly scheduled election for the 
 official – the BOE members being recalled are up for election in November 
 2022. Supervisors Shamann Walton, Connie Chan, Hillary Ronen, Dean Preston 
 and Myrna Melgar support the measure.\nAaron Peskin will be presenting and 
 discussing the recall reform measure at the next Haight Ashbury 
 Neighborhood Council meeting. We look forward to hearing more January 13, 
 2022.\n\nThe Haight Ashbury Neighborhood Council Board of Directors (BOD) 
 is taking a stance against politically motivated recalls. In the October 
 Voice it was written recalls should be more difficult: “It's expensive. 
 It could be called an excess of democracy, and undermine the independence 
 of elected officials. It can be abused. More recalls are organized by 
 business than by ordinary citizens (the BOE recall has raised $1m from 
 people who also supplied dark money in the last D5 Supervisor race), and 
 often with less than a year before the next election... In SF, recalls can 
 place even more power in the hands of the Mayor. The school board issues 
 appear to be matters of policy, not rising to criminal 
 acts.”\n\nHistorically recalls typically have fewer voters because most 
 off season elections have low voter turn out. These low turn out recall 
 elections can be used by a minority as a way of over-turning the high turn 
 out election they didn't win. In addition, recalls distracts office holders 
 from doing the job they were elected to do. \n\nWhile Governor Newsom has 
 many shortcomings as a leader, we were against the recall despite the harm 
 he caused while a supervisor and Mayor of San Francisco. This recall was 
 little more than an attempted power grab by dark money backers taking 
 advantage of COVID19.\n\nDistrict Attorney Chesa Boudin was elected to 
 implement criminal justice reform, a long talked about issue never 
 seriously explored. It is something that takes a generation, not a year. 
 While the media likes to claim crime is out of control, the data actually 
 shows crime is lower. The Chronicle even platformed Kimberly Guilfoile in 
 January 2020 printing an op ed attacking then new DA Boudin. It isn’t 
 easy in San Francisco, especially for small businesses, but we are not in 
 the dystopian nightmare that the backers of this recall claim. A recall is 
 petty politics by those with sour grapes. \n\nFinally, Board of 
 Education… no criminal acts were committed by those targeted for the 
 recall. While some may disagree with their positions on various policies, 
 all three, Moliga, Lopez, and Collins, are up for re-election in November 
 2022. The recall folks originally stated they would recall the entire 
 board, but oddly only Moliga, Collins, and Lopez are targeted despite all 
 of the board are now eligible for recall. Much of the recall money comes 
 from charter school folks and people who funded Astro-turf organizations 
 attacking Supervisor Preston in the last D5 election. \n\nLet us not allow 
 SF to further descend into a rabbit hole of petty disagreements. Vote no on 
 the 2022 recalls, protect democratically elected politicians.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/01/03/18847071.php
SUMMARY:Recall Reform Proposed for San Francisco
LOCATION:Zoom  How to Join the HANC\nMeeting. Please join us on Thursday, 
 January\n13, at 7:00 pm. Aaron Peskin\nwill discuss a ballot measure 
 to\nreform the recall process. (We\nare not discussing the 
 specific\nupcoming recall elections.)\n• To join the meeting, copy 
 this\nlink: 
 https://zoom.us/j/97001985\n280?pwd=Nkx2UVFPSTRVWG\nVXUVZEbFRkb0xwQT09\n• 
 Or, with the Zoom app:\nMeeting ID: 970 0198 5280\nPasscode: 333544\n• 
 Zoom also provides telephone\nnumbers. These are not toll free\nnumbers. 
 Check with your\nphone company before you\nincur charges.\n• The closest 
 number is:\n+1 669 900 6833 (San Jose)\nMeeting ID: 970 0198 
 5280\nPasscode: 333544\nAdditional numbers can be\nfound at: 
 https://zoom.us/u/\ncontinued on page 4 acJ3FRWOWk
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/01/03/18847071.php
DTSTART:20220114T030000Z
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