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Showing posts with label Election '24. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Election '24. Show all posts

Friday, November 15, 2024

Bauters losing ground in County Supervisor's Race, Now Trailing Bas

 Breaking News

The latest tranche of votes were just released by the Alameda County Registrar of Voters and they show Emeryville City Councilman John Bauters now trailing Nikki Fortunato Bas 68,630 to 68,736 votes in the Alameda County Board of Supervisor's race (district 5).  According to sources in the Bas campaign, a "few more hundreds' of votes still need to be counted.  The County Registrar has not said from what regions within the district the last few votes that remain to be counted are.  Today's tranche leaves Mr Bauters 106 votes short in the 49.96% to 50.04% race.  





Saturday, November 2, 2024

Mayor Welch Says She's a Targeted Victim of a Green Party Typo

Election Nuttiness:

Fueled By 'Outrage Porn', Emeryville's Mayor Says Green Party's Typo Was Done On Purpose

Mayor Claims Victim Status Regardless of Apology

She Made the Same Error Herself in 2021, But Her Error 

Was Just "A Simple Mistake" She Says 

Emeryville’s mayor is crying foul over a typographical error made by the Green Party in their voter guide that she says was purposeful and meant to demean her and she is refusing to accept an official retraction for the error offered by the Greens.  Instead, she is repeating the slight all over social media despite the fact that she made the same mistake in her official candidate’s statement run up for her 2021 City Council run.  

The Green Party error came in their Green Voter Guide that left out the word ‘non-incumbents’ in a block of text.  So the original stated, “Council member Priforce’s slate of two, the only African Americans running for council, are Mia Esperanza Brown and Calvin Dillahunty.”  As corrected, it was changed to “Council member Priforce’s slate of two, the only African Americans non-incumbents running for council, are Mia Esperanza Brown and Calvin Dillahunty" (our italics).

Mayor Welch says she's Black and the Green Party is trying
to take that away from her.  It's so unfair!  But it's exactly like
how she tried to take away Brynnda Collins' Blackness in 2021. 
Brynnda has been Black since her birth but Courtney just ain't seein' it.

But in 2021, Council member Welch was on the other side of the same error, an error SHE made.  In her official Alameda County Candidate Statement from 2021, candidate Welch stated she is “…the first Black woman in 34 years to seek a seat on the Council.”  In fact, a Black woman, Brynnda Collins, sought a seat on the City Council in 2016.  After her statement was shown to be factually incorrect, the statement Ms Welch submitted to the County Registrar under oath as being factual, Ms Welch was forced to file voluminous legal paperwork with the County, correcting the mistake. 

Candidate Welch admitted she made a mistake with her 
false claims in 2021.  She admitted it only when Alameda County 
forced her to correct the error.
 

At the time, the Tattler didn’t report on the story because we took Ms Welch at her word it was a simple mistake.  However, after she won the 2021 election, Council member Welch has been shown to be a petulant vulgarian, quick to lay accusations on and name call her constituents who disagree with her policies and her dissenting City Council colleague, Kalimah Priforce.

Not satisfied with the Green Party’s apology and retraction of the typo, Mayor Welch has continued to bring up the issue on social media, claiming without evidence, the first version of the voter guide was not a mistake.  She is not mentioning to her followers that the Green Party has corrected the error.  

What Mayor Welch is claiming is that the Green Party of Alameda County, by their typo, they're trying to take away her 'Blackness', the same thing, exactly, that candidate Welch did in 2021 to Brynnda Collins with the typo in her Candidate Statement when she tried to take away Ms Collin's 'Blackness'.

Perhaps sensing further political gain that could be made, Mayor Welch, who is Vice President of the organization Black Elected Officials of California (BEOC), released a public letter of condemnation against the Green Party of Alameda County stating the typographical error by the Greens had “deliberately misled” the people and they had therefore “undermined the democratic process".  Further, BEOC claimed, without providing evidence, “We are especially troubled by what appears to be a pattern of targeted disinformation against people of color and women.”  However, BEOC refused to provide any examples that would bolster their claim of such a pattern created by the Green Party, a political party that has anti-racism and anti-sexism among its Ten Core Values.  Finishing up their letter, BEOC demanded another public apology from the Greens.  

 However, the Greens were having none of that.  After calling the hyperbole from Mayor Welch a "political tactic", Green Party County Council member Greg Jan wrote a responce to the BEOC that explained they had already publicly apologized for the typo error and made the correction in their Voter Guide the same day they were alerted to it.  Mr Jan's letter shamed the Mayor and even connected Council member John Bauters into the Welch fabricated imbroglio, stating: “We do ask that Courtney Welch refrain from using her position as Vice-President of your body from further bullying the Green Party of Alameda County and our electorate with baseless attacks just as she and John Bauters have done with their elected positions against their council member colleagues.”

Seemingly incapable of shame, Mayor Welch has continued on with her attacks on the Green Party, inferring bad faith in their motives, prompting a response from Mr Jan who told the Tattler yesterday, “This Mayor doesn’t seem to want to accept our apology we publicly announced for the typographical error (in our Green Party Voter Guide).  It’s strange since the Mayor herself made the same error in her Candidate’s Statement last time when she ran for Council. We apologized for the typo and we’re moving on.  We think the Mayor should too.” 

Mayor Welch did not answer our requests for comment.


Outrage porn (also called outrage discourse, outrage media and outrage journalism) is any type of media or narrative designed to use outrage to provoke strong emotional reactions for the purpose of expanding audiences or increasing engagement.


Wednesday, October 23, 2024

City Council Election '24 Questionnaire: Mia Esperanza Brown and Calvin Dillahunty

 This City Council election season, the Tattler continues its 15 year tradition of  disseminating answers put to City Council candidates for the edification of the voting public.  The upcoming City Council election features six candidates competing for three seats.  The six are: Mia Esperanza Brown, Calvin Dillahunty, Sam Gould, Sukhdeep Kaur, Matthew Solomon and Courtney Welch.  Courtney Welch is an incumbent as well as Sukhdeep Kaur (who was appointed to her position following the resignation of Council member Medina).   Unfortunately, both Ms Welch and Ms Kaur declined to take part in this opportunity to inform the voters about their ideas for our town.  Accountability being an integral part of any democratic polity, voters should take into consideration, candidates who don’t respect the community enough to answer questions.  

We thank each candidate that took the time to answer these questions for the voters to consider.  Our City Council is improved when democratic norms are followed, when the politicians show deference and respect to the voters.  We thank Sam Gould, Matthew Solomon, Calvin Dillahunty and Mia Esperanza Brown.

Each of the other candidate’s answers to these questions will be posted in succession, the names were picked at random.  Next up are two candidates running together as a slate, Mia Esperanza Brown and Calvin Dillahunty.

Mia Esperanza Brown



1)  Name the three biggest issues facing Emeryville right now and what are your ideas to address them?

Decorum: Making our politics in Emeryville better and more accessible to everyone. We need to change how we select our mayors and make it about an election and not a selection

Affordability and lack of tenant protections: Lowering barriers to home ownership in Emeryville & reversing the downward trend of declining Black and Brown home ownership.  Allowing tenants the right to organize, allowing tenants to be first bidders to purchase rental property once it enters the market. This would be similar to Berkeley’s TOPA but before it was weakened.
   
Public safety and working with our officers to ensure the community feels safer and working with Kalimah and Calvin to gather community feedback about a substation (mini police station) in South Emeryville.  I would add more license plate reader cameras but with significant oversight from the public.


2)  Emeryville is the East Bay city with the lowest number of families per housing unit.  Why is that and what do you suggest should be done about it (if anything)?

I’m a mother of two children under three who has had to deal with eviction notices in Emeryville.  I believe the affordability of living in Emeryville is slipping away from us because we haven’t had people in office who are fighting for working families.  Before getting my current apartment, I was on a waiting list for a year.  We don’t have enough units that people can afford, but some developers are tired of this “no-parking” trend that our city council has demanded from them.  Carless cities for families aren't real and aren't pragmatic, practical, or progressive. It’s elitist.

This can be very frustrating and disheartening for families who do not have time to wait and need housing and SPACE!  Also having adequate parks and parking spaces for families can be crucial.  We also need to provide better support for our schools.  I have a friend in Emeryville who may be leaving just because she wants her daughter to attend better schools.  No parent should have to move just to afford opportunities for their children, and it isn’t EUSD’s fault, it’s ours for not coming up with an education master plan as a city.


3)   What do you think about Council collegiality?  Is being collegial with each other important to help facilitate the people’s work?

I think that council members should respect each other’s views even if they do not agree or have the same beliefs.  All council members should be doing what is best for the community and the people of Emeryville.

I’m guessing those who don’t understand why this is important also have the privilege of not being aware of workplace discrimination, especially as a woman, woman of color.  Being passed up for opportunities because you have a difference of opinion or because you are different should not have a place in city hall.

As council member, I would vote to put back in place the rotating of mayors to end favoritism.


4)  Is there enough accountability between Council members and the constituents?  If not, what is the solution?

Absolutely not. The hurdles it takes just for someone like me, for anyone to file a grievance about council members is impossible.  I’ve been in Emeryville for a few years but I used to think like everyone else that Emeryville was like Oakland and Berkeley in how we govern and prevent corruption. It’s not!

We could be better at accountability and responsibility by holding our elected officials to a higher standard.


5)  Is it important to build more park land in Emeryville going forward?  If so, how much do we need and how will you deliver it?

Yes. I would follow the general plan.


6)  What tells you how much market rate housing to build in Emeryville?  Is it knowable (measurable)?

RHNA, but I think we have had more than enough market rate housing. The other candidates are build, baby, build, but we’re not building low-income and low low income units like we should.


7)  Is the ratio of rental housing to ownership housing in Emeryville good?  If not, how will you address this issue for the Black and Brown community there are more renters than homeowners in Emeryville.

I think we are in a renter’s phase that could last fifty years from now, especially when we keep using bonds to borrow money that we’re paying for, for over a century.  As a below-market-rate renter we need to have a voice on our city council.  There is a below-market-rate renter on there but she’s all about the build, baby, build along with the other YIMBYs.  We need real advocacy so the barriers that were created in our BMR home ownership program that reduced the number of new homeowners just to ONE over a span of years, never happens again.


8)  Should Emeryville have a public library?  If so, how?

No. The Golden Gate branch should suffice especially since we are in a budget deficit.


9)  The City Council resolved support for the people of Ukraine, but not for a ceasefire in Gaza.  Was that correct in your view?
I support ceasefires worldwide.


10)  What should be done about all the empty storefront retail space in town?  Do developers have a responsibility to rent out their retail space they built?

One of the reasons why we have empty storefronts is because we don’t support our local businesses like the 40th Street Multi-Modal project that threatens to shut down our legacy businesses.  Calvin and I would join Council member Priforce in proposing a vacancy tax for residences and commercial properties and units.  If you have the space, fill it up, if not, pay a fee that will go to support eviction-prevention and our schools.

.                        .                        .

Calvin Dillahunty




1)  Name the three biggest issues facing Emeryville right now and what are your ideas to address them?

I believe the three most important opportunities for growth in Emeryville that I happen to be focused on are public safety, lack of support for small businesses and their workers, and our climbing deficit. Our slate, “Emery Rising,” is about new city leadership learning from the mistakes of the past so we can govern in a better way than what exists now.

Council member Priforce has been preparing Mia and I for these roles, whereas Mia Esperanza Brown is focused on some areas, I’m focused on others and then there’s some overlap. I believe in progressive policing and that the relationship between the city and our police force should be healthy and Emeryville as a whole should feel safer for everyone. Public safety is more than just policing. It includes fire, hazard, and disaster preparedness systems, but we can’t be prepared for the worst if we are in a deep financial hole.

I was picked to be on the slate because of my business background and maybe I can be considered naive for bringing my customer service and technical expertise into city government to resolve our deficit, but we do have to do a better job of keeping our local businesses around in Emeryville like the 40th Street Multi-Model and how it’s hurting businesses that have been with us for years.

By hearing from them rather than dictating to them, we can come to a better compromise than what they are getting. What’s currently on the books of how we treat people in Emeryville isn’t working, so I would help with better small business support, widen our police presence with a substation in South Emeryville, and fix our deficit by reforming the city’s relationship with big developers. No more of these shady dealings to finance political campaigns.

2)  Emeryville is the East Bay city with the lowest number of families per housing unit. Why is that and what do you suggest should be done about it (if anything)?

We need better tenant protections, and we have to make sure landlords actually rent out properties. This is both for residential and commercial. Emeryville feels empty, like we are building for companies that won’t come and sticking residents with the bill for them not showing up. To support families in Emeryville we have to increase home ownership opportunities and improve our BMR (Below Market Rate) program for owners and renters.

Most of all, we need a Vacancy Tax similar to other cities so properties and units won’t sit empty for long without there being a cost.

3)  What do you think about Council collegiality? Is being collegial with each other important to help facilitate the people’s work?

It is, but not at the expense of independence. If I were a council member, I would represent my constituents, not my own interests. I attended a council meeting last month and several times while I was there it was giving me “high school,” vibes. I probably wouldn’t be in politics if it weren’t for Councilmember Priforce because he showed me that my voice matters.

I admit, Mia and I waited until the last minute to get our paperwork because we heard that politics gets ugly in Emeryville and I stay away from drama. All this talk about Kalimah using us as political tools is disrespectful and the people making these comments (I heard it’s just one guy) are cowards. You have something to say, say it to my face. Don’t be a coward. Keep the drama to yourself and respect that Mia and I want this because it’s time for change in Emeryville.

My building was sold right from under us and my car was broken into, and they act like everything is golden. The way the city council carry themselves, they make it seem like they only want certain people belonging up there. That’s not collegial. It’s high school.

4)  Is there enough accountability between Council members and the constituents? If not, what is the solution?

It’s hard to have accountability when everyone is expected to sound the same and care about the same things. Does everyone have to be so focused on housing and transportation? What about other parts of the city? What about balancing our budget? We need better ethics. Let the people decide.

The best way to have accountability is to have different people on the council so there’s a greater balance of viewpoints and experiences, but that’s not our current council.

5)  Is it important to build more park land in Emeryville going forward? If so, how much do we need and how will you deliver it?

I think we should follow our General Plan that tells us we should be building more parks. We just got a new park extension, which is great, but we are so behind from where we should be. I don’t want to promise to build more parks until we fix our budget, but I’m open to it.

6)  What tells you how much market rate housing to build in Emeryville? Is it knowable (measurable)?

We have the RHNA numbers that informs us how many units we should build, but we are building more luxury housing than affordable housing, and so we’re not even following those numbers.

7)  Is the ratio of rental housing to ownership housing in Emeryville good? If not, how will you address this issue?

I’m a renter so I think it’s good, or else I wouldn’t be here, but I don’t want to be a renter forever, and I would like to stay in Emeryville. The weather is much better here than Arizona.

Home ownership is key to any city that wants to grow, but it’s also a vehicle for economic mobility, a wealth builder, and I was pretty pissed off that we created ways to stop people applying for our BMR ownership program in the past. It was discrimination and it wasn’t during my father or grandfather’s day, it was within this decade. We need more homes we can own in Emeryville and we can protect renters while also protecting single-family homeowners.

8)  Should Emeryville have a public library? If so, how?

My first instinct is yes. It's everyone's gut reaction to say yes because who doesn’t like libraries? When Council member Priforce explained to me the cost of having one rather than supporting the Golden Gate branch, I understood why we don’t have one. I’d rather we focus on the art center instead as a priority.

9)  The City Council resolved support for the people of Ukraine, but not for a ceasefire in Gaza. Was that correct in your view?

I support all ceasefires worldwide.

10)  What should be done about all the empty storefront retail space in town? Do developers have a responsibility to rent out their retail space they built?

We should put a vacancy tax on them until they find a tenant.


Monday, October 21, 2024

City Council Election '24 Questionnaire: Sam Gould

This City Council election season, the Tattler continues its 15 year tradition of  disseminating answers put to City Council candidates for the edification of the voting public.  The upcoming City Council election features six candidates competing for three seats.  The six are: Mia Esperanza Brown, Calvin Dillahunty, Sam Gould, Sukhdeep Kaur, Matthew Solomon and Courtney Welch.  Courtney Welch is an incumbent as well as Sukhdeep Kaur (who was appointed to her position following the resignation of Council member Medina).   Unfortunately, both Ms Welch and Ms Kaur declined to take part in this opportunity to inform the voters about their ideas for our town.  Accountability being an integral part of any democratic polity, voters should take into consideration, candidates who don’t respect the community enough to answer questions.  

We thank each candidate that took the time to answer these questions for the voters to consider.  Our City Council is improved when democratic norms are followed, when the politicians show deference for the voters.  Accordingly, we thank Sam Gould, Matthew Solomon, Calvin Dillahunty and Mia Esperanza Brown.

Each of the other candidate’s answers to these questions will be posted in succession, the order of the names are random.  First up is Sam Gould.

Sam Gould


https://www.gouldforemeryville.com/

 1)  Name the three biggest issues facing Emeryville right now and what are your ideas to address them?

Cost of housing - I believe we should build housing for all income levels to drive down rents, fight displacement and housing insecurity, and bring negotiating power back to tenants. As the housing shortage will take time to address, we should be strongly supporting our tenants from unjust rent increases and evictions.

Street Safety - We should continue our efforts to make it easier to commute by modes other than single occupant automobiles and prioritize overcoming the traffic violence epidemic with changes to infrastructure.

Protecting our local businesses - The pandemic hit Emeryville hard and we are still struggling to recover. Collaborating with small businesses to build community safety as well as driving business through messaging and support are highly important. With work from home being more emphasized, a city with as large of a percent of workers vs. residents in our daytime population as we have makes us highly impacted.


2)  Emeryville is the East Bay city with the lowest number of families per housing unit.  Why is that and what do you suggest should be done about it (if anything)?

I believe this is primarily due to state housing laws restricting the types of housing we can build in our city, although our local laws also play a role. Despite single family zoning being effectively abolished in our city, our current permitting process and requirements make it very hard to build dense small-lot family housing (commonly referred to as missing middle). I will advocate for change at the state and local level to see more of this type of housing and make Emeryville more accessible to families.


3)   What do you think about Council collegiality?  Is being collegial with each other important to help facilitate the people’s work?

I believe council collegiality is important. I was a big advocate for the implementation of a code of ethics to hold our council members accountable and signed it when implemented as a member of our BPAC.


4)  Is there enough accountability between Council members and the constituents?  If not, what is the solution?

Yes, I believe the level of community engagement in our procedures goes above and beyond what would normally be expected of a city. However, I believe there is an issue with equitable access to council decisions, with the people most able to give public comment being those who are able to take the time away from their lives to speak to the government. I believe we should focus on conclusions drawn from community outreach over those who are able to take the time to give comments in person. 


5)  Is it important to build more park land in Emeryville going forward?  If so, how much do we need and how will you deliver it?

Yes, I believe our current park space is inequitably distributed, with our lowest income residents having the least access to green space within walking distance. Having park space within a 5 minute walk is what I believe is the most important metric, and we should accomplish this by looking for opportunities to build pocket parks across the city and strategic depaving and development of overbuilt streets, surface parking lots, and industrial sites.


6)  What tells you how much market rate housing to build in Emeryville?  Is it knowable (measurable)?

I think RHNA is a poor system for determining the housing affordability mix, and it should be seen as the floor of how many units (market rate and subsidized income-restricted affordable housing) we should be building. I believe we should build enough market rate housing to tip negotiating power from landlords to tenants, which means shooting for a vacancy rate of 5% based on studies from other cities around the world. Currently even our newest apartments have vacancy rates below 2% so we should be building more for all income levels.


7)  Is the ratio of rental housing to ownership housing in Emeryville good?  If not, how will you address this issue?

I believe we should be incentivizing more ownership housing, but we are restricted heavily at the state level in how we can get more built. You may notice that around 2007 the number of condos built in the city and state as a whole plummeted. This is due to Condo Defect Liability laws that make it economically infeasible to build condo style ownership housing because developers risk being sued for up to 10 years after the home was constructed. I will advocate for state level reform so we can get small-lot infill condos built in our city again.


8)  Should Emeryville have a public library?  If so, how?

No, I believe the Golden Gate Library serves our city well and we currently do not have the budget to support one of our own.


9) The City Council resolved support for the people of Ukraine, but not for a ceasefire in Gaza.  Was that correct in your view?

I fully support calls for a ceasefire in Gaza. I personally do not believe city councils should be involved in international politics, but resolving support for Ukraine set a precedent and a resolution for a ceasefire in Gaza should have been authored.


10)  What should be done about all the empty storefront retail space in town?  Do developers have a responsibility to rent out their retail space they built?

This is definitely a problem, banks can call loans on a developer if they rent out space for less than they told the bank it was worth. For renters this means deals like “first two months free” rather than lower rents in new apartment buildings, but for commercial space with leases measured in years this isn’t feasible. I think we shouldn’t be requiring retail space without the population (both residents and workers) to support it, and for the spaces that do exist we should be making them more accessible with safer streets and more housing with residents that can shop there.