Community
Raiders Have Major Presence at We Day
The Oakland Raiders – FB Marcel Reece WR Rod Streater, CB Taiwan Jones, P Marquette King and LS Jon Condo – participated in the first ever We Day California, celebrating youth’s commitment to community service on a local and global scale.
Aproduct of the Free the Children organization, We Day is an event that requires students to earn a ticket through participation in one local initiative and one global initiative to help make the world a better place. These actions include raising money to build schools around the world, provide clean drinking water, collecting food for local communities, and more.
“We believe that through service, students will develop the skills to succeed for the rest of their lives,” said Free the Children co-founder Craig Kielburger.
We Day events have occurred in cities across Canada, in Seattle, and in the United Kingdom. We Day at Oracle Arena was the first in the state of California. “So 16,000 students are in attendance.
They come from 420 schools today,” explained Kielburger. “[They are from] 127 school districts, so 40 percent of those students are South-Cal and 60 percent North-Cal that are with us.”
The event brought together entertainers, athletes, philanthropists and business owners, who took the time to thank the students in attendance for their hard work in community service.
Martin Luther King III, the eldest son of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was one of the first speakers to take the stage.King challenged the students to decide how they will live their lives.
“My father used to say that in life you must decide whether you want to be a thermometer or a thermostat,” he said. “See, a thermometer is a great device, but all it does is record temperature. There’s another device called a thermostat and it regulates the temperature. And what I’m saying to you is in life, you must decide if you’re going to be like a thermometer or a thermostat. Whether you’re going to record what happens or whether you’re going to be part of regulating what happens in your life.
Award-winning actor Martin Sheen also addressed the crowd, expressing his gratitude to those in attendance for the actions they are taking to change the world.
By your presence here today, you are not typical or average young people who see things and ask, ‘why?’ You are dreaming things that never were and saying, ‘why not?’” he told the students.
Raiders players also addressed the crowd and participated in the various activities with the youth.
“It was an honor to be on stage at We Day,” said Wide Receiver Rod Streater. “I take pride in giving back to the community. To see so many people there who have given back to the community too is amazing.”
Magic Johnson is a We Day co-chair and has been active in helping motivate, empower and inspire students and said he was a big Raider fan.
“..I used to have season tickets. So Al Davis was a great friend, great man. It’s nice that all of us are getting involved, giving back,” Johnson said. “When you think about Free the Children, We Day, this is what it’s all about. These kids are really happy the Raiders are here, that I’m a part of it, and it’s really great.”
Alameda County
D.A. Pamela Price Fights Back Against Recall
In an attempt to thwart the recall call campaign against her, Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price announced at a press conference on Tuesday, April 30, that her team is launching a state investigation on the political action committee funding the recall. Speaking at Everett and Jones Barbeque Restaurant at Oakland’s Jack London Square, Price accused the recall campaign as undemocratic and says she will fight against injustice.
By Carla Thomas
In an attempt to thwart the recall call campaign against her, Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price announced at a press conference on Tuesday, April 30, that her team is launching a state investigation on the political action committee funding the recall.
Speaking at Everett and Jones Barbeque Restaurant at Oakland’s Jack London Square, Price accused the recall campaign as undemocratic and says she will fight against injustice.
Price announced that the California Fair Political Practices Commission (CFPPC) was looking into the complaint filed by her supporters against two groups supporting the recall.
Price said the group Reviving the Bay Area appears to be the financial and organizational arm of Save Alameda For Everyone (SAFE), the group leading the recall effort against her. The complaint by recall-opposing group Protect the Win for Public Safety alleges Reviving the Bay Area has breached the law by not filing a third quarter report listing its contributors and hiding its funding sources from the public at least through September of 2023.
Price also claimed that the SAFE recall group is functioning illegally both financially and operationally.
“Between September 2023 and November 2023, they donated approximately $578,000 to SAFE without complying with the laws that govern all political committees in California,” said Price. “We applaud the FPPC’s action to investigate this entity as well as the finances that have also come under question of the SAFE committee, where we’ve learned that they were paying some of the main spokespersons and funding an illegal force that they called a security force.
“So there have been a lot of financial irregularities, coupled with the irregular practices of the signature-gathering company PCI Communications that literally paid for hundreds of people to come into our community and gather signatures using bait-and-switch tactics and misleading people and engaging in fraudulent signature-gathering.”
Price also accused the Alameda County Registrar of Voters of not operating properly.
At a press conference at the City Hall Plaza late Tuesday afternoon, SAFE and recall supporters demanded that supervisors set a special election date before the November general election. Supporters of Price and opposers of Price clashed and spoke passionately against each other.
Supporters of the recall feel that Price’s, criminal justice reforms support perpetrators of crime, rather than the victims. They also blame Price for higher crime rates in the county. Price supporters feel that her reforms are necessary to transform an unjust system. “Price’s role is to uphold the law and this recall campaign is an attack on her,” said Oakland attorney Walter Riley.
Recall opponents reject those assertions and say Price’s critics don’t understand the role the county’s top prosecutor plays in the criminal justice system.
Price also said she would be going before the Alameda County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday to challenge the signature count for her recall campaign.
Later in the evening, the Board of Supervisors unanimously voted in support of the recall, citing that enough signatures had been collected for the recall effort to continue.
On May 14, the Board of Supervisors will determine a date for a special election recall or place on the November ballot. According to Price, a special election recall will cost the county 15-20 million dollars and her supporters hosted another rally last week, urging the Board of Supervisors to not approve a special election recall.
#PamelaPrice #Recall #AlamedaCountyDA
Alameda County
A Safe Place, Bay Area Domestic Violence Community Organization, Opens New Service Center in Oakland
Oakland-Bay Area non-profit, A Safe Place, announces the grand opening of its newly purchased building in Oakland that will be a service center for families that have suffered from domestic violence. The new, two-story building has over six new service rooms for counseling, mental health support groups, legal services, children’s treatment, safe space for community engagement, and partnership activities.
By Courtney Slocum Riley
Special to The Post
Oakland-Bay Area non-profit, A Safe Place, announces the grand opening of its newly purchased building in Oakland that will be a service center for families that have suffered from domestic violence.
The new, two-story building has over six new service rooms for counseling, mental health support groups, legal services, children’s treatment, safe space for community engagement, and partnership activities.
Domestic violence occurrences and offenses account for a considerable amount of all violent crimes in Alameda County. A Safe Place is attempting to provide a safe place for families to heal. A Safe Place is the only comprehensive domestic violence assistance program including a safehouse, in Oakland.
The grand opening celebration will also serve as a fundraiser to build out healing, therapeutic spaces for children and adult victims and survivors and survivors of domestic violence (male and female).
The new service center will expand the work of the organization, founded in 1976 when a group of women working in San Francisco came together to address the urgent need for a shelter in the East Bay. A year later, they founded A Safe Place (ASP) in Oakland. Run solely by volunteers, they set up a crisis line to offer crisis counseling and information to battered women and their children.
The organization serves over 500 adults and children annually through a host of services including crisis counseling via 24-hour crisis line, emergency motel and safehouse sheltering, mental health services (counseling and support groups).
Under the leadership of Executive Director, Carolyn Russell, the organization has grown from a single program into the comprehensive domestic violence and assistance program. ASP strives to meet the growing and diverse needs of our growing community.
The organization hopes to complete all the upgrades and therapeutic room improvements by August 2024. The public is invited to donate to the effort by using the website at www.asafeplace.org/donate. The organization also accepts in-kind gifts as well as items from the organization’s Amazon Wishlist.
Art
Mario Van Peebles’ ‘Outlaw Posse’ Screened at Oakland’s Grand Lake Theatre
The Oakland International Film Festival hosted a screening of “Outlaw Posse” at the Grand Lake Theatre on Monday. Special guests included director/actor Mario Van Peebles and his co-star, Oakland native Scytorya Rhodes. The film is Peebles’ second western, the first being ‘Posse,’ 13 years ago.
By Carla Thomas
The Oakland International Film Festival hosted a screening of “Outlaw Posse” at the Grand Lake Theatre on Monday. Special guests included director/actor Mario Van Peebles and his co-star, Oakland native Scytorya Rhodes. The film is Peebles’ second western, the first being ‘Posse,’ 13 years ago. Filmmaker Van Peebles shared his passion for independent artistry and producing projects with his son, Mandela, who also starred in the film, along with Whoopi Goldberg and Cedric the Entertainer. Next week, The Post will publish an in-depth interview featuring Peebles’ reflections on his work, future projects, and continuing his father’s legacy and Rhodes on her grandfather, a real-life cowboy.
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