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DESCRIPTION:No School Closures\nTown Hall Meeting\nParker Community School\nJoin 
 parents, teachers and community members for a continued conversation around 
 the ongoing fight against school closures, privatization and gentrification 
 in Oakland.\nSunday August 14, 2022 2PM\nParker Community School\n7929 Ney 
 Ave\nOakland\n\nSTOP OUSD Security Assault: Parents & Community Members At 
 Parker Liberation School Press 
 Conference\nhttps://youtu.be/kBiQZGnAF7o\n\nSLAP Education Conference Tapes 
 On Privatization Of Education, Port & Public Services\n\nStop Privatization 
 Of Education, Port & Public Services: SLAP Educational Conference Intros 
 Part 1\nhttps://youtu.be/mRGnPfHCDdA\nConnecting The Dots On  Privatization 
 of Community Colleges, Port & Public Services With Non-Profits Part 
 2\nhttps://youtu.be/9nxL0zKuu7I\nPrivatization of The Port, Community 
 Colleges & K-12 Education: SLAP Education Conference Part 
 3\nhttps://youtu.be/OHRrDuvhi7w\nSLAP Education Conference On Fight Against 
 Privatization Part 4\nhttps://youtu.be/nl0XTgVqeZQ\n\nTeachers and Port 
 Workers Have Taken over an Oakland School\nResisting the 
 billionaire-ification of their city, workers and their families are 
 offering a community-centered vision at Parker Elementary. And it’s 
 working. [Editor's Note: Updates have been made throughout this article to 
 reflect ongoing developments in the 
 story.]\n\nhttps://progressive.org/public-schools-advocate/teachers-port-workers-take-over-oakland-school-macleay-080522/\nBY 
 DON MACLEAY AUGUST 5, 2022 12:38 PM\n\n  \nIn what may at first seem an odd 
 alliance, teachers and port workers in Oakland, California, have joined 
 together to oppose charter school expansion and a new baseball stadium 
 proposed by luxury real estate developers.\n\nForming a group called 
 Schools and Labor Against Privatization, or SLAP, they began their campaign 
 with a strike that shut down the city’s port and public schools for an 
 entire day in April. In May, parents and teachers with SLAP took over 
 Parker Elementary School in East Oakland, which was slated to close, and 
 kept it running to provide services to students over the summer. 
 \n\nOakland, like New Orleans, Denver, St. Louis, and other metropolitan 
 centers, has long been a target of the charter school industry. “Oakland 
 has been a veritable charter boomtown,” KQED reported in 2019. “There 
 are now 45 charter schools attended by about 30 percent of the city's K-12 
 students, up from thirteen charters in 2003. Largely as a result, the 
 district lost about 17,000 students in those 16 years.” Many Oakland 
 schools have seen parts of their school buildings leased out to private 
 charter operators. \n\nAs charters expand in Oakland, district 
 administrators have been closing down public schools. The latest slate of 
 closures will shutter seven schools, three of which serve as community 
 schools that act as hubs for providing their families with nutritional, 
 medical, dental, and mental health services. Some of the schools on the hit 
 list have no nearby alternative public school. \n\nOf course, there are 
 nearby private charter schools. The cost of closing those schools and then 
 of running schools further away from where students live is never addressed 
 by the administration and closure supporters. They do talk a lot about what 
 the saved money could be spent on, yet there is no provision to do so in 
 their new school budget.  \n\nThey continue to unofficially operate the 
 school, which they refer to as “liberated.”\n\n\nAt the same time that 
 Oakland public schools are increasingly threatened with closure and 
 privatization, the city of Oakland is also considering a sweetheart real 
 estate deal surrounding a sports stadium. A plan put forward by city 
 officials would tear down the Oakland Coliseum—where the major league 
 Oakland A’s are based—and replace it with a new stadium complex that 
 includes high-end waterfront apartments. Dubbed the “Howard Terminal 
 Ballpark,” it would be built over what is currently a functioning port 
 facility. \n\nBoth the stadium deal and the public school closures center 
 on John Fisher, a local billionaire and heir to the Gap Inc. fortune who 
 chairs the board of the Knowledge Is Power Program, or KIPP, the largest 
 network of brick-and-mortar charter schools in the country. He also owns 
 the Oakland A’s, and has threatened to move the team if the stadium 
 relocation plan falls through. Opposition to Fisher, who supports 
 privatizing both the port and our schools, has played a significant role in 
 SLAP’s formation.\n\nAdd this all up and one finds teachers, longshore 
 workers and assorted pro-labor, pro-public school activists organizing 
 together against privatization. \n\nFor two months, they continued to 
 unofficially operate Parker Elementary School, which they refer to as 
 “liberated.” Volunteers slept on campus and took shifts handling 
 supervision and donation drop-offs. They offered their own summer community 
 school program for students, complete with a graduation ceremony. \n\nThen 
 on August 4, security staff with Oakland Unified School District forcibly 
 removed workers occupying Parker Elementary in an effort to retake the 
 school that broke out in violence. Dozens more community members and at 
 least five school board candidates turned out in opposition. One candidate, 
 Max Orozco, told local news outlets he was handcuffed and beaten by 
 district security, mentioning chest pain and showing TV cameras broken skin 
 on his lip. \n\n“I ask the city of Oakland and OUSD to investigate what 
 happened to me and other members of the community and remove...all the 
 people that allow and approved this attack on Parker community,” Orozco 
 tells The Progressive.\n\nThe two unions representing both groups of 
 workers (ILWU Local 10 and OEA) are not officially affiliated with SLAP, 
 but many of their leaders are members. Though a district statement claimed 
 officials had changed locks and set an alarm at Parker, SLAP members have 
 remained both inside and outside of the school and plan to keep operations 
 going.  \n\n“There is a long history of linking school privatization with 
 other privatization, such as of port land,” says Divya Farias, a special 
 education high school teacher and union member. “Activists have been 
 working to bring the two issues, and the two unions, 
 closer.”\n\nVanCedric Williams, a school board trustee for the district 
 where the port is located, was one of only two board members to vote 
 against the school closures. \n\n“It was hard to see that only two of us 
 stood up to the district and the board,” he says, adding that he was glad 
 to see the efforts at Parker.  “I had some good conversations with people 
 who are very clear on the importance of Parker to the community and want to 
 have input on what the school should be.” \n\nMost of the port workers 
 are Oakland residents, many of them parents to children in local public 
 schools. The injury from school closures and loss of port jobs is felt 
 across the city—but grassroots solidarity and direct action offers hope. 
 \n\n“School closures and port privatization are one and the same and 
 speak to larger issues around privatization in Oakland,” says Hillary 
 Chen, an Oakland teacher, local activist, and part of the community running 
 Parker school. “People have a positive view of the ILWU and wanted to 
 work with the longshoreman. There were already personal connections.” \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/08/09/18851504.php
SUMMARY:No School Closures — Oakland Parker Town Hall Meeting
LOCATION:Parker Community School\n7929 Ney Ave.\nOakland
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/08/09/18851504.php
DTSTART:20220814T210000Z
DTEND:20220814T230000Z
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