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Indybay Feature
SF City College at City Hall: YES on Prop. A!
The SF City College community rallied at City Hall September 4th in support of Proposition A on the November 6th ballot.
President Alisa Messer, American Federation of Teachers #2121, served as MC.
SPEAKERS:
Shanell Williams
President, Associated Students
Tim Henderson
A. Philip Randolph Institute
David Chiu
President, Board of Supervisors
Eric Mar
Supervisor, District #1
John Avalos
Supervisor. District #11
President Alisa Messer, American Federation of Teachers #2121, served as MC.
SPEAKERS:
Shanell Williams
President, Associated Students
Tim Henderson
A. Philip Randolph Institute
David Chiu
President, Board of Supervisors
Eric Mar
Supervisor, District #1
John Avalos
Supervisor. District #11
Nine-minute QT movie. 97MB.
YES on Prop. A
San Francisco City Hall:
September 4, 2012
Part 1: This is Pt. 1
Part 2: *click*
Part 3: *click*
Speakers in Part 2:
John Rizzo
President, Board of Trustees, City College of San Francisco
Norman Yee
President, Board of Education, San Francisco
Sandra Fewer
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Emily Murase
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Kim-Shree Maufas
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Speakers in Part 3:
Deborah Burger
Co-President of National Nurses United & California Nurses Association
F. X. Crowley
Candidate for San Francisco Board of Supervisors District 7
Conny Ford
Vice President for Political Activities, San Francisco Labor Council
Chelsea Boilard
Director of Programs, Coleman Advocates for Children & Youth
Alex Tom
Executive Director, Chinese Progressive Association
Sue Englander
Correspondent, Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club
Rafael Mandelman
Candidate for CCSF Board of Trustees
Prop A, The Parcel Tax:
City College Trustees have placed a temporary $79 parcel tax on the November 2012 ballot to provide more than $14 million in local funds annually for the next 8 years that the state cannot take away. This revenue will help ensure an accessible, affordable, quality education for students; maintain core academic classes in writing, math and science; prepare students for four-year universities; preserve workforce training for careers in nursing, engineering, and technology; fill critical teaching and other positions; and keep college libraries open. The parcel tax requires independent audits and a Citizens’ Oversight Committee, expires after eight years, and all revenue will be retained for local use to support core academic programming.
MORE
YES on Prop. A
San Francisco City Hall:
September 4, 2012
Part 1: This is Pt. 1
Part 2: *click*
Part 3: *click*
Speakers in Part 2:
John Rizzo
President, Board of Trustees, City College of San Francisco
Norman Yee
President, Board of Education, San Francisco
Sandra Fewer
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Emily Murase
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Kim-Shree Maufas
Commissioner, Board of Education, San Francisco
Speakers in Part 3:
Deborah Burger
Co-President of National Nurses United & California Nurses Association
F. X. Crowley
Candidate for San Francisco Board of Supervisors District 7
Conny Ford
Vice President for Political Activities, San Francisco Labor Council
Chelsea Boilard
Director of Programs, Coleman Advocates for Children & Youth
Alex Tom
Executive Director, Chinese Progressive Association
Sue Englander
Correspondent, Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club
Rafael Mandelman
Candidate for CCSF Board of Trustees
Prop A, The Parcel Tax:
City College Trustees have placed a temporary $79 parcel tax on the November 2012 ballot to provide more than $14 million in local funds annually for the next 8 years that the state cannot take away. This revenue will help ensure an accessible, affordable, quality education for students; maintain core academic classes in writing, math and science; prepare students for four-year universities; preserve workforce training for careers in nursing, engineering, and technology; fill critical teaching and other positions; and keep college libraries open. The parcel tax requires independent audits and a Citizens’ Oversight Committee, expires after eight years, and all revenue will be retained for local use to support core academic programming.
MORE
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