Connect with us

Barbara Lee

WNBA’s Golden State Valkyries Kick Off Season with Community Programs in Oakland

“The Golden State Valkyries are more than a team—they’re a movement,” said Oakland Interim-Mayor Kevin Jenkins. “Their touchdown in Oakland marks a new era of opportunity, inspiration, and equity in sports. This partnership reflects our city’s deep commitment to uplifting women, investing in youth, and building a community where every dream has a place to grow. We’re proud to welcome the Valkyries to The Town.” 

Published

on

The Valkyries came to Oakland City Hall with a “Hoopbus.” Present were (from left to right): City Councilmembers Noel Gallo, Rebecca Kaplan, Zac Unger and Rowena Brown; Oakland Mayor-elect Barbara Lee, Valkyries President Jess Smith, a Valkyries team representative and Deputy Mayor LaNiece Jones. Photo courtesy Rebecca Kaplan’s office.
The Valkyries came to Oakland City Hall with a “Hoopbus.” Present were (from left to right): City Councilmembers Noel Gallo, Rebecca Kaplan, Zac Unger and Rowena Brown; Oakland Mayor-elect Barbara Lee, Valkyries President Jess Smith, a Valkyries team representative and Deputy Mayor LaNiece Jones. Photo courtesy Rebecca Kaplan’s office.

Team installs new nets at playgrounds, holds flag-raisings at City Halls in Oakland and S.F.

Special to The Post

The Golden State Valkyries brought the excitement of their inaugural season to every corner of the Bay Area with a full slate of community celebrations leading up to their historic home-opener against the Los Angeles Sparks at the Chase Center in San Francisco on Friday.

The week featured flag-raising ceremonies at city halls in Oakland and San Francisco, three “Violet Net” installation days at Oakland parks to encourage basketball play, fun “Hoopbus” takeovers at multiple schools presented by Kaiser Permanente, and player appearances.

“The Golden State Valkyries are more than a team—they’re a movement,” said Oakland Interim-Mayor Kevin Jenkins. “Their touchdown in Oakland marks a new era of opportunity, inspiration, and equity in sports. This partnership reflects our city’s deep commitment to uplifting women, investing in youth, and building a community where every dream has a place to grow. We’re proud to welcome the Valkyries to The Town.”

In total, 90 violet nets were installed on 45 basketball courts across 34 public parks throughout Oakland this week. A list of the parks receiving violet nets can be found at Valkyries.com.

About the Golden State Valkyries

The Golden State Valkyries, the WNBA affiliate of the seven-time NBA Champion Golden State Warriors, were announced as the 13th WNBA franchise on Oct. 5, 2023. According to Norse mythology, Valkyries are a host of warrior women who are fearless and unwavering – flying through air and sea alike.

This brand is Golden State’s modern interpretation of Valkyries: strong, bold, and fierce. Tipping off during the 2025 WNBA season, the team is headquartered in Oakland and will play home games at Chase Center in San Francisco. For Golden State Valkyries’ assets, including team logos, visit valkyries.com.

Alameda County

Mayor Lee Responds to OPD Chief Floyd Mitchell’s Decision to Resign

Chief Mitchell announced last week that he will be stepping down from his position after 18 months. His final day will be Dec. 5. 

Published

on

OPD Chief Floyd Mitchell. Official portrait.
OPD Chief Floyd Mitchell. Official portrait.

By Ken Epstein

Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee Office has responded to the announcement that OPD Chief Floyd Mitchell has decided to resign.

Chief Mitchell announced last week that he will be stepping down from his position after 18 months. His final day will be Dec. 5.

“I want to thank Chief Mitchell for his dedicated service to Oakland and his leadership during a critical time for our city,” said Mayor Lee.

“Under his tenure, we have seen significant reductions in crime – a testament to his commitment to public safety and the hard work of our police officers,” said Lee. “I am grateful for Chief Mitchell’s collaboration with our administration and his focus on community-centered policing.

“The women and men of the Oakland Police Department have my full support as we work together to ensure a smooth transition and continue building on the progress we’ve made for Oakland’s residents,” Lee said.

Continue Reading

Barbara Lee

Under Mayor Lee, Oakland Is Cutting Red Tape for Small Business Permits

Abad said permit reform is already underway. Recent code amendments have relaxed rules for businesses in Downtown Oakland, the Broadway-Valdez district in Uptown, and the area around the Lake Merritt BART Station.

Published

on

Mayor Barbara Lee. Photo courtesy of City of Oakland.
Mayor Barbara Lee. Photo courtesy of City of Oakland.

By Post Staff

One of Mayor Barbara Lee’s top priorities, along with housing, illegal dumping, homelessness, and public safety has been to respond to calls for permit reform, a longtime concern of economic development groups and community advocates who have complained that complex and restrictive permit rules are squashing small businesses.

According to Robin Abad, ombudsperson for the City of Oakland, the goal of permit reform is to “streamline and reduce bureaucracy for small businesses.”

“Permit reform impacts so many aspects of our local economy,” Abad said. “With the right changes, more entrepreneurs will be able to realize their dreams by starting up businesses in Oakland, and we’ll be able to retain the rich and diverse small business community we enjoy here.”

Abad said permit reform is already underway. Recent code amendments have relaxed rules for businesses in Downtown Oakland, the Broadway-Valdez district in Uptown, and the area around the Lake Merritt BART Station.

More amendments will be proposed this fall to expand those relaxed rules to commercial districts across the whole city.

The changes will make it easier for businesses such as medical offices, banks, tutoring facilities, pet groomers and fitness studios to open in ground-floor retail spaces up to a certain square-footage.

Makers and sellers of artisanal goods — such as furniture making, textile production, and metalworking — could operate in commercial zones citywide with no square-footage or floor-level requirements. And businesses in these zones could have billiards tables and arcade games without a special permit.

Currently, these activities are either not permitted or require an application for review by the Bureau of Planning. Some conditional permit applications also must go through a public hearing, where community members can weigh in, before the permit can be approved.

“We have expanded places where land use regulations don’t require extensive approval processes, so it’s much easier to open up,” Abad said. “These changes are part of stimulating local business and inviting folks to open up businesses in Oakland.”

Further, until recently all businesses, like arts and entertainment venues, had to apply for a special permit to sell alcohol. This required a Planning Commission hearing, which could take up to a year.

This was a separate permit on top of a liquor license from California State Alcohol Beverage Control, the latter of which is required for all businesses that serve alcohol and is granted at the state level.

This flexible new permit now makes it easier for bars, nightclubs, theaters, pool halls, museums, art galleries, salons, and similar venues in central business district zones to serve alcohol.

Other proposed changes include the addition of entertainment and food sales in dispensaries that have an existing onsite consumption permit to operate as cannabis cafes.

These changes come in response to the passage of California State Assembly Bill 1775, authorizing cities to permit cannabis cafes that provide valid county health permits for preparation, sale, and consumption of non-cannabis food and beverages at state-licensed and locally permitted cannabis dispensaries with onsite consumption lounges.

“Visit Oakland” already offers a Cannabis Trail, and the introduction of cannabis cafes could contribute to cannabis tourism in The Town.

Changes like these require amendments to the city’s planning code. Already, the Downtown Oakland Specific Plan, adopted in 2024, prioritizes new zoning that allows flexible ground-floor uses for customer-oriented artisan production, office, and retail use.

Abad said the city aims ultimately to expand the planning code amendments to all commercial corridors in Oakland. Ideally, this expansion would go before the City Council to be adopted before the end of this calendar year.

“We have many incredible small business entrepreneurs and restaurateurs here in the City of Oakland, and that’s part of what makes Oakland beautiful and wonderful,” Abad said. “We want to encourage local enterprises to open as much as possible. So, let’s cut out any unnecessary procedures and streamline the process.”

Continue Reading

Activism

Hundreds in Oakland Denounce Trump’s Suppression of Voting Rights

The Oakland rally was sponsored by local organizations including Bay Resistance, Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE), Alameda Labor Council, SEIU 1021, California Working Families Party, and Indivisible East Bay.

Published

on

Speakers at the Aug 16 pro-democracy rally at Lake Merritt in Oakland included Congresswoman Lateefah Simon, Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee, and Alameda County Supervisor Nikki Fortunato Bas. Photo by Ken Epstein.
Speakers at the Aug 16 pro-democracy rally at Lake Merritt in Oakland included Congresswoman Lateefah Simon, Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee, and Alameda County Supervisor Nikki Fortunato Bas. Photo by Ken Epstein.

I came here today to bring this message that it is absolutely midnight, and we will find our way to morning’ – Congresswoman Lateefah Simon

By Ken Epstein

Joining more than 300 protests and marches across the country, hundreds of pro-democracy demonstrators rallied on short notice in Oakland on Saturday, Aug. 16 at the Lake Merritt Amphitheatre in Oakland to denounce the Trump administration’s plans to guarantee Republican reelection by gerrymandering and suppressing voting rights in Texas and other states.

According to Drucilla Tigner, executive director of pro-democracy coalition Texas For All, tens of thousands of people in 44 states and Washington, D.C., attended the day’s protests.

The Oakland rally was sponsored by local organizations including Bay Resistance, Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE), Alameda Labor Council, SEIU 1021, California Working Families Party, and Indivisible East Bay.

Among the speakers were elected officials Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee, Congresswoman Lateefah Simon, and Alameda County Supervisor Nikki Fortunato Bas, as well as local labor and community leaders. The rally was emceed by Valarie Bachelor, a union organizer and vice president of the Oakland Board of Education.

Rep. Simon took a strong stand for justice in Oakland and internationally, speaking out for a free Palestine.

“I came (here today) to bring this message that it is absolutely midnight, and we will find our way to morning. … It is midnight when we have an administration that is so vested in their racism and their xenophobia they are clear that their job is to go into homes and to separate families and to take our brothers and sisters into gulags.

“It is midnight when we sat on the floor of the United States Congress and watched the Republican Party vote ‘yes’ on sending trillions in bombs all over the world,” she said. “Believe me, they are watching that there is a durable (opposition) movement that is growing, that is swelling all over this country.”

Oakland Mayor Lee said, “We (in Oakland) are showing the country what ‘power to the people’ means.

Hundreds rally at Lake Merritt Amphitheater Aug. 16 protesting Trump administration attempts to gerrymander and suppress voting rights. Photo by Ken Epstein.

Hundreds rally at Lake Merritt Amphitheater Aug. 16 protesting Trump administration attempts to gerrymander and suppress voting rights. Photo by Ken Epstein.

“This is a coordinated, dangerous effort to take power from the people and hand it to the Trump MAGA extremist Republicans,” Lee said. “They’re trying to rewrite the rules and the laws to restrict and to dismantle what’s left of our voting rights and what’s left of our democracy.”

“We’re not going to let that happen, though,” she continued. “Here in Oakland, once again, we’re not sitting this one out. Let us show what Oakland power is. We believe in our democracy and not in autocracies.”

Supervisor Fortunato-Bas said, “Trump and his Republican allies are trying to steal the 2026 election by redrawing districts in their favor and attacking voting rights. They know they’re going to lose if there’s a level playing field.

“I am working with all of you to fight back,” she continued. “I’m chairing a committee called Alameda County Together for all and we are funding, Know Your Rights trainings, rapid response, and legal services to keep our immigrant families together.

“We have already allocated hundreds of millions of dollars to shore up our social safety net that Trump is defunding,” she said.

Said Derrick Boutte, SEIU 1021’s vice president for the East Bay region, “This is a political emergency. Trump allies are undermining fair elections, silencing votes of color, and holding entire communities hostage to push their political agenda.

“The Republicans keep rigging the rules to tip the balance of power, and if we do nothing, they will continue to pass laws that hurt workers. They have already illegally suspended union contracts and collective bargaining rights for federal workers.”

Kampala Taiz Rancifer, president of the Oakland teachers’ union, the Oakland Education Association (OEA), said, “(Trump) is trying to cut people of color out of the democratic process and disenfranchise our communities. He wants to destroy our democracy. He wants to destroy us. But Oakland, we must show them who we are.”

Gerald Lenoir, co-founder of Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI), connected the current fight for democratic rights against fascism to the context of lessons learned from the historic battles against slavery and Jim Crow.

“Freedom and democracy are on the line, and we know if we fight, we can win,” he said. “But we’ve got to do it across all our different communities. We’ve got to invite the immigrant rights movement into this. We’ve got to invite the labor movement. We’ve got to move across the generations, across the movements, across the lines of racial identity, across the lines of gender identity, and fight to win.”

Calling for solidarity and unity within the community, Rev. Jeremy J. McCants, senior pastor-elect of Imani Community Church, said there is a “moral imperative” to oppose the greed that is now rampant in this country, which is “purely evil” and a symptom of terrible “leadership malfunction.”

To counter this evil, “we must rely on ourselves,” he said. “We are utilizing and putting our faith into action. This is what love in action looks like. This is what faith in action looks like. This is what community in action looks like.”

Continue Reading

Subscribe to receive news and updates from the Oakland Post

* indicates required

CHECK OUT THE LATEST ISSUE OF THE OAKLAND POST

ADVERTISEMENT

WORK FROM HOME

Home-based business with potential monthly income of $10K+ per month. A proven training system and website provided to maximize business effectiveness. Perfect job to earn side and primary income. Contact Lynne for more details: Lynne4npusa@gmail.com 800-334-0540

Facebook

iStock.
Activism23 hours ago

As California Hits Aging Milestone, State Releases Its Fifth Master Plan for Aging

Don Lemon. Shutterstock.
Activism23 hours ago

After Don Lemon’s Arrest, Black Officials Raise Concerns About Independent Black Media

iStock.
Activism23 hours ago

“Victory” for Voting Rights: Weber and Bonta Hail Judge’s Decision on Huntington Beach I.D. Law

Tiffany Duvernay-Smith.
Activism23 hours ago

Can You Afford a Mortgage but Not the Down Payment? Dream For All Offers Up to $150K

The AI and Business moderator and panelists at CAACC's 2026 Economy Summit. Shown left to right: Vic Baker, Equitify; Cathy Adams, President and CEO of the Oakland African American Chamber of Commerce; Kevin Harbour, BizFed Institute; Ahmad Holmes, CAACC President and CEO; Sarah Harris, Black Business Association; Angela Shell, California Department of General Services; Edwin Lombard, ELM Strategies; Christine Shelby, Digital Strategist, Sacramento Observer; and Patricia Watts, CAACC Chairperson. CBM photo by Antonio Ray Harvey.
Activism24 hours ago

At Sac Summit, California African American Chamber of Commerce Shows Growing Clout; Lays Out Top Goals

‘Be Still...’ by Virginia Jourdan is on display at the Richmond Art Center (RAC), in Richmond, CA. Photo by Carla Thomas.
Activism24 hours ago

Art of the African Diaspora Celebrates Legacy and Community at Richmond Art Center

The gubernatorial debate was hosted by KTVU’s Greg Lee, KTTV’s Marla Tellez and KTVU’s Andre Senior. The candidates are (l.-r.): Xavier Becerra, Steve Hilton, Matt Mahan, Tom Steyer, Tony Thurmond, Antonio Villaraigosa, and Betty Yee.
Community24 hours ago

Candidates Vying for Governor’s Seat Debate at Ruth Williams–Bayview Opera House in San Francisco

The Oakland Black Cowboys Association will hold an event to teach children the love of riding at Fairyland on Feb. 14. Here, a member of the OBCA high-fives a young rider at an event in 2021. Facebook photo.
Alameda County24 hours ago

Black History Events in the East Bay

Activism1 day ago

Oakland Post: Week of February 4 – 10, 2026

Shuttterstock.
Activism7 days ago

Medi-Cal Cares for You and Your Baby Every Step of the Way

Marin City community leaders (l.-r.): Terrie Green, executive director of Marin City Climate Resilience (MCCR); Wambua Musyoki, Stanford University; Khamil Callahan, Santa Rosa Junior College; Serenity Allen, Xavier University; and Chinaka Green, MCCR associate director.
Activism7 days ago

Life Expectancy in Marin City, a Black Community, Is 15-17 Years Less than the Rest of Marin County

Uncategorized7 days ago

Rest in Peace: A.M.E. Pastor and L.A Civil Rights Icon Cecil “Chip” Murray Passes

Uncategorized7 days ago

Court Throws Out Law That Allowed Californians to Build Duplexes, Triplexes and RDUs on Their Properties

Uncategorized7 days ago

Funds for Down Payments and Credit Repair Given to Black First Time Homebuyers

Uncategorized7 days ago

Black Leadership Council Honors California’s Three Black Constitutional Officers

Bishop Joseph Simmons, Senior Pastor, Greater St. Paul Baptist Church, Oakland
Activism1 month ago

OP-ED: AB 1349 Puts Corporate Power Over Community

A rendering of Alfred L. Cralle’s ice cream scoop. Public domain.
Black History1 month ago

Alfred Cralle: Inventor of the Ice Cream Scoop

Costco. Courtesy image.
Activism1 month ago

First 5 Alameda County Distributes Over $8 Million in First Wave of Critical Relief Funds for Historically Underpaid Caregivers

Activism1 month ago

Oakland Post: Week of December 31, 2025 – January 6, 2026

Gnae Dismuske and her children.
Activism1 month ago

Protecting California’s Black Moms and Babies: Policies and Programs Struggle to Fix Deep-Rooted Maternal Health Inequities

Assemblymember Lori D. Wilson (D-Suisun City). File photo.
Activism1 month ago

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Assemblymember Lori Wilson — Advocate for Equity, the Environment, and More

Nikki Helms is a midwife and full-spectrum birthing care advocate.
Activism1 month ago

Why Peace on Earth Begins with Birth, a Q&A with Midwife Nikki Helms

From top left: Pastor David Hall asking the children what they want to be when they grow up. Worship team Jake Monaghan, Ruby Friedman, and Keri Carpenter. Children lining up to receive their presents. Photos by Godfrey Lee.
Activism1 month ago

Big God Ministry Gives Away Toys in Marin City

Assemblymember Tina McKinnor (D-Inglewood). File photo.
Activism1 month ago

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, Champion of Reparations, Housing and Workers’ Rights

Book cover of Let Me Be Real With You and author Arshay Cooper. Courtesy of HarperOne.
Advice1 month ago

BOOK REVIEW: Let Me Be Real With You

Sen. Laura Richardson (D-San Pedro). File photo.
Activism1 month ago

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Sen. Laura Richardson, Who Made Legislative History This Year

Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas (D-Los Angeles). File photo.
Activism1 month ago

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas – an Advocate for Jobs and Justice

#NNPA BlackPress4 weeks ago

Jefferson County (AL) Democrats Open Qualifying for 2026 Primary Elections

#NNPA BlackPress4 weeks ago

COMMENTARY: With Gratitude and Praise for 2026

#NNPA BlackPress4 weeks ago

Skater Emmanuel Savary Sharpens Routines for the 2026 U.S. Championships

Trending

Copyright ©2021 Post News Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.