Mark your calendar for September 13th at 7 PM at Park Branch Library (1833 Page Street) for it will be your first major opportunity to learn and discuss local ballot measures for this November's election.
While we all know more than we ever wanted about Mitt, his dog and his pony we are far less well informed about local ballot measures that will, arguable, have more direct impact our daily lives. From profound ( Props C, E and F) to simply symbolic (G), from important (A and B) to not so important (D) all local ballot measures will be discussed.
Taken as a whole the seven local measures, while fewer than usual, will have real impacts. The City College parcel tax ( A) and Park Bond (B) measures are not simply funding measures but also are imbedded with real policy issues. HANC opposes B and lays out its reasons in a separate article in this issue of the Voice.
Propositions C, the Housing Trust Fund, E, the new gross receipt business tax and F, a policy statement on the future of the Hetch Hetchy water and power system, have long lasting importance and involve billions of public dollars. These three are not trivial issues and you need to understand them. HANC will lay out its support for Proposition C ( see article in this issue) and has invited speakers on E and F.
It wont be until late September before the Comical addresses these issues ( if then) and the various local political blogs are all caught up in the personality slug fest of the Supervisors race, so HANC is the best place to begin an understanding of the issues on the ballot.
Plan to be there and bring a friend.
Kezar Gardens, our combined community garden, recycling center, and native plant nursery, at 780 Frederick Street, remains open despite the misguided efforts of the City’s Recreation and Parks Department (RPD) to evict HANC from the site. Eviction proceedings began on December 2, 2010, after a meeting of the Recreation and Parks Commission (RPC). The agenda item at that meeting was to approve the design for a community garden, with no mention of HANC’s recycling center. Yet, despite overwhelming public support for our recycling center, RPC voted to approve the plan, and also indicated that inherent in the approval was the eviction of our recycling center. RPD served us with a 90-day eviction notice within a few days, which led to an eviction lawsuit filed on March 8, 2011.
On that same day, the Board of Supervisors passed a “Resolution requesting the Recreation and Parks Department and the Department of the Environment collaborate to establish a comprehensive Parks recycling program using the expertise, volunteer base, and facilities of the HANC Recycling Center in Golden Gate Park, for the Department of the Environment to establish and Independent Recycling Center Master Plan, and requesting the Recreation and Parks Department to rescind the eviction of the HANC Recycling Center from Golden Gate Park.” Click here for the full text of the resolution.
Despite this resolution and despite a letter from HANC’s attorney to RPD explaining that the eviction notice was served on the wrong day to effect an eviction, RPD proceeded with its eviction lawsuit. RPD must have eventually realized its error, because on May 26, 2011, (through its attorney, the City Attorney’s Office), it dismissed the eviction. But that’s far from the end of the story.
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