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Refund, Restore, Reimagine, and Reclaim King’s Radical Legacy

Oaklanders have a dream too. We dream of a total transformation in how we define and implement public safety. We dream of REfunding our communities with 50% of OPD’s dollars and directing those dollars into programs, policies and practices that create true public safety. We dream of housing our unhoused and being able to afford our rent. We dream of an equitable and competent response to COVID-19. We dream of jobs that pay a living wage and schools with the resources to adequately educate our children. We dream of thriving communities that can heal, instead of being traumatized and terrorized by gun violence. We dream of a 100% progressive city government that reflects the values that are the heart and soul of our city.

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On January 18th, the nation will celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. For the vast majority, this will mean the on-going and deliberate white-washing of his legacy.  Rather than being celebrated for the strategic, disciplined, tactical organizer that he was; Coca-Cola commercials will use his image to sell products.  Rather than being honored for his willingness to stand up to power, interrupt business as usual, shut it down and put his body on the line for freedom, he will be erroneously portrayed as a quiet man who gave good speeches and begged power for concessions.  Not here in Oakland. In The Town, for the seventh consecutive year, the Anti Police-Terror Project and our allies will celebrate the true spirit of Dr. King with the annual Reclaim MLK’s Radical Legacy Weekend. On that Monday, thousands will safely car caravan from the Port to East Oakland demanding and dreaming of a Town that lives up to King’s dream.

Oaklanders have a dream too. We dream of a total transformation in how we define and implement public safety. We dream of REfunding our communities with 50% of OPD’s dollars and directing those dollars into programs, policies and practices that create true public safety. We dream of housing our unhoused and being able to afford our rent. We dream of an equitable and competent response to COVID-19. We dream of jobs that pay a living wage and schools with the resources to adequately educate our children. We dream of thriving communities that can heal, instead of being traumatized and terrorized by gun violence. We dream of a 100% progressive city government that reflects the values that are the heart and soul of our city.

Oaklanders are actively making our dream our collective lived reality. We are organizing, strategizing and mobilizing. And we are winning. We are winning Council seats, like newly inaugurated councilmember Carroll Fife and newly-elected council President Nikki Fortunato Bas. We are winning mechanisms to REfund our communities, like the City’s new Reimagining Public Safety Task Force. We are winning an end to collaboration between OPD and the federal law enforcement agencies that surveil and harm our people. We are winning renter rights and tenant protections. We are winning but there is much more to do.

This past summer, we witnessed powerful uprisings to defend Black lives after the tragic police murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Protests were held in Oakland, all over the U.S. and world, and the resounding demand to defund the police dominated the narrative. Almost six years ago, the Anti Police-Terror Project made the first call to Defund the Oakland Police Department, but very few took us seriously. Now we have the support of hundreds of thousands in doing this critical work to end state sanctioned violence while visioning whole, healthy and safe communities. Now that the cameras are gone and the masses have left the streets, the organizing must continue.  Our voices must still be heard at council and commission meetings, mutual aid in these trying times must continue and the demand for the  liberation of Black bodies must be unceasing.

On King’s day, we will make the connections between the violence of the state and the violence in our streets. All violence is state violence, and we hold the Schaff administration, and the state at large, responsible for creating and/or maintaining the conditions that make this nightmare a lived reality for far too many of our people. On this Reclaim MLK Day, we will uplift the names of the fallen and REimagine an Oakland free from intercommunal warring. Here too is the place to lift up our demands to #DefundOPD and #REfundOurCommunity. Police do not prevent or interrupt violence — they respond after the violence happens, or commit the violence themselves. We have a dream that one day we will break the cycle of militarized policing and mass incarceration and invest in things that actually keep us safe. We have a dream that we will get to the gun before the bullet flies rather than watch one more mother bury her child. The data is clear: resourced communities are safe communities.  It is time for the city to invest in support services, and social programs with the same ferocity it has invested in the failed mechanism of violent policing.  We cannot incarcerate our way to wholeness.

The work to REfund, REstore, and REimagine our communities is a natural evolution of King’s work, legacy and unfulfilled dream. He said, “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” That’s Oakland’s budget every year, as OPD devours half of our general fund while housing and social services get next to nothing.

As we REimagine what public safety means in Oakland — community violence prevention, housing as a human right, living-wage jobs with dignity, good schools, clean streets and parks, mental health care and crisis support, healthy and vibrant communities — we are making King’s Dream a reality. Join us.

Artivist Cat Brooks is an actress, playwright, director and advocate. She is the Co-founder of the Anti Police-Terror Project and Executive Director of the Justice Teams Network. She lives in West Oakland with her daughter.

 

Activism

Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024

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To enlarge your view of this issue, use the slider, magnifying glass icon or full page icon in the lower right corner of the browser window.

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Alameda County

DA Pamela Price Stands by Mom Who Lost Son to Gun Violence in Oakland

Last week, The Post published a photo showing Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones, whose son, Patrick DeMarco Scott, was gunned down by an unknown assailant in 2018.

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District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones
District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones

Publisher’s note: Last week, The Post published a photo showing Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones, whose son, Patrick DeMarco Scott, was gunned down by an unknown assailant in 2018. The photo was too small for readers to see where the women were and what they were doing.  Here we show Price and Jones as they complete a walk in memory of Scott. For more information and to contribute, please contact Carol Jones at 510-978-5517 at morefoundation.help@gmail.com. Courtesy photo.

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City Government

Vallejo Welcomes Interim City Manager Beverli Marshall

At Tuesday night’s Council meeting, the Vallejo City Council appointed Beverli Marshall as the interim city manager. Her tenure in the City Manager’s Office began today, Wednesday, April 10. Mayor Robert McConnell praised Marshall’s extensive background, noting her “wide breadth of experience in many areas that will assist the City and its citizens in understanding the complexity of the many issues that must be solved” in Vallejo.

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Beverli Marshall began her first day with the City on April 10. ICMA image.
Beverli Marshall began her first day with the City on April 10. ICMA image.

Special to The Post

At Tuesday night’s Council meeting, the Vallejo City Council appointed Beverli Marshall as the interim city manager. Her tenure in the City Manager’s Office began today, Wednesday, April 10.

Mayor Robert McConnell praised Marshall’s extensive background, noting her “wide breadth of experience in many areas that will assist the City and its citizens in understanding the complexity of the many issues that must be solved” in Vallejo.

Current City Manager Michael Malone, whose official departure is slated for April 18, expressed his well wishes. “I wish the City of Vallejo and Interim City Manager Marshall all the best in moving forward on the progress we’ve made to improve service to residents.” Malone expressed his hope that the staff and Council will work closely with ICM Marshall to “ensure success and prosperity for the City.”

According to the Vallejo Sun, Malone stepped into the role of interim city manager in 2021 and became permanent in 2022. Previously, Malone served as the city’s water director and decided to retire from city service e at the end of his contract which is April 18.

“I hope the excellent work of City staff will continue for years to come in Vallejo,” he said. “However, recent developments have led me to this decision to announce my retirement.”

When Malone was appointed, Vallejo was awash in scandals involving the housing division and the police department. A third of the city’s jobs went unfilled during most of his tenure, making for a rocky road for getting things done, the Vallejo Sun reported.

At last night’s council meeting, McConnell explained the selection process, highlighting the council’s confidence in achieving positive outcomes through a collaborative effort, and said this afternoon, “The Council is confident that by working closely together, positive results will be obtained.” 

While the search for a permanent city manager is ongoing, an announcement is expected in the coming months.

On behalf of the City Council, Mayor McConnell extended gratitude to the staff, citizen groups, and recruitment firm. 

“The Council wishes to thank the staff, the citizens’ group, and the recruitment firm for their diligent work and careful consideration for the selection of what is possibly the most important decision a Council can make on behalf of the betterment of our City,” McConnell said.

The Vallejo Sun contributed to this report.

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