Assembly Candidates Confront the Issues: Howard Terminal , Local Control of Schools, Reparations
The candidates are running to represent Oakland, Alameda and San Leandro in a June 29 special election for California State Assembly District #18, a seat that was previously held by Rob Bonta, who was recently appointed as California Attorney General.
Candidates for State Assembly responded to pointedquestions on some of the critical issues facing Oakland schools and the community – including displacement, housing, reparations, public safety and returning full local control to the public schools – at a recent Education Candidate Forum on Zoom hosted by the School of Education at Holy Names University in Oakland, in partnership with the Oakland Post Community Assembly.
The candidates are running to represent Oakland, Alameda and San Leandro in a June 29 special election for California State Assembly District #18, a seat that was previously held by Rob Bonta, who was recently appointed as California Attorney General. Candidates attending the forum were James Aguilar, Victor Aguilar, Mia Bonta, Joel Britton, Janani Ramachandran, and Malia Vella.
The event was hosted by Dr. Kimberly Mayfield, dean of the School of Education atHoly Names, who emphasized the importance of these issues for the city’s future.
“We have just come through a moral and political crisis (in this country) around racism and the government’s role in maintaining this system. We are looking for a new approach, and this is the lens we will be using today for this education forum,” saidDr. Mayfield.
Also welcoming the candidates and the public to event were Oakland Post publisher Paul Cobb and his wife Gay Plair Cobb, who highlightedtheir intense interest in schools and education. Paul Cobb is a former member of the Oakland Board of Education, and Gay Cobb served for many years on the Alameda County Board of Education.
The first question tocandidates was whether they would oppose the big money coalition of politicians andpowerful interestsbehindOakland A’s owner John Fisher’s stadium and massive downtown real estate project at Howard Terminal.
Opponents of the projectarguethat the A’s proposal is vaguely worded and would come at ahigh cost to Oakland taxpayers, who would foot the bill for decades. They say the development would createa city-within-a-city, like Piedmont, that woulddisplace localresidents and likely wreckthe Port of Oakland and its decent-paying longshore jobs, turning the city’s waterfrontand downtown into a tourist attraction like Pier 39 in San Francisco.
Of the three candidates who are considered to be the top contenders., only Janani Ramachandran was strongly opposed to Fisher’s deal. Malia Vella and Mia Bonta raised concerns but did not oppose the development.
James Aguilar, Victor Aguilar and JoelBritton were also against the project.
Bonta, president of the school board in Alameda, said, “I believe that there is a way for us to be able to hold the Oakland A’s accountable to the plan and the processes that they made … starting with stakeholder involvement in the environmental impact of the proposed project.”
Malia Vella,vice mayor of Alameda and attorney for the Teamsters Union, said, “We need to have community input. The best projects are the results of a robust process that involve community stakeholders,… and an opportunity to meaningfully engage.. to get the best community benefits.”
Said JananiRamachandran, a social justice attorney, “I was the first candidate in this race who took an uncompromising, clear and public stand against the project … because having visited Howard Terminal, I have seen why it is entirely unfeasible and harmful to our West Oakland residents and extremely harmful to our thriving port, the fifth largest in the country.”
The candidates supported the statewide demand or reparations and the movement for Reparations for Black Students raised by community groups in Oakland.They also backed an approach to public safety that deemphasizes policing and stresses the need for jobs, housing and health care to build safe communities.
Candidates also backed the return of local control of Oakland schools and loan forgiveness, to end the domination of the schoolsby a state-imposed trustee and the austerity program pushed by Fiscal Crisis Management and Assistance Team (FCMAT),as well as halting the closing of schools in flatland neighborhoods.
Bonta called for “an end state receivership, which is decades old, andthe FCMAT order that has created a status of fiscal enslavement of Oakland Unified, which paired with growth of charter schools has created a structural deficit that OUSDcan’t get out from under.”
About teacher recruitment, all the candidates said would seek to end expensive standardized tests and other obstacles facing Black and other people of color who want to become teachers.
Janani Ramachandran said she would support legislation“to remove excess and expensive tests and other barriers that .. keep Black and other potential teachers of color from entering the profession.”