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San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

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Largest Elementary School District in the State: Chula Vista

October 13, 2016 by Barbara Zaragoza

Chula Vista Elementary School District (CVESD) is the state’s largest elementary school district (K-6) and good news: the CVESD outperformed its county and state counterparts in 2016 with 62% of students meeting or exceeding the standards in English. In math CV students scored 49% on average compared to the county’s 44% and the state’s 37%.

However, you’ll still want to be careful. In May 2016, shortly before the election primary, Larry Breitfelder-Navas and consultant Kenneth Moser filed a complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission saying that three trustees: Eduardo Reyes, Leslie Bunker and Francisco Tamayo made campaign violations connected to reporting donations and spending during the 2014 school board election. Now careful. Breitfelder-Navas only named three Democratic trustees and Breitfelder-Navas is a Republican who ran for Chula Vista City Council in 2012.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: North of the Fence, Nov 2016 Election Tagged With: Chula Vista

Props 65 & 67 – Revenge of the Plastic Bag Industrial Complex

October 12, 2016 by Doug Porter

News roundup logo

The bastard sons of the dirty energy industry are trying to pull a fast one on California voters with Props 65 and 67.

In a perfect world, the people who put together Proposition 65, along with forcing us to vote to uphold a legislatively passed ban (Prop 67) on the crappy plastic bags handed out by retail stores, would be tried for crimes against the planet. If found guilty they would be sentenced to picking up cigarette butts on beaches in Libya for a term of no less than two years, wearing tee shirts emblazoned with We Love Imperialism on the back.

What Proposition 65 is all about is revenge. The plastic bag industry and the oil companies who sell them raw materials want to have it both ways. If they’re gonna lose the vote to ban plastic bags, then maybe they can fool voters with a measure promising to do something good for the environment.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Environment, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

Prop 64 – Just Legalize Marijuana, Already

October 11, 2016 by Doug Porter

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California, Arizona, Nevada, Maine, and Massachusetts will be voting on legalizing the recreational use of marijuana this fall.

Some people, including many pro-legalization advocates, think this is about easing another legal intoxicant into society. It’s not. It’s about undoing a prohibition based on ‘scientific racism.’ It’s about a ‘war on drugs’ that served as a gateway towards militarization of law enforcement and eroded the constitutional rights of all Americans.

Legalizing pot won’t undo those things. In case you haven’t noticed, government and society rarely move backward. But legalization does provide a path moving forward that makes a lot more sense than the failed policies proceeding it.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Marijuana, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

The Second Debate: A Cornered Rat Turns Vicious

October 10, 2016 by Doug Porter

second debate

If you just watched the debate portion of yesterday’s political drama, you missed Donald Trump sitting at a press conference with four women with Clinton issues he’d flown to St. Louis.

Three of the women claimed somebody who wasn’t on the ticket sexually abused them in some manner. One of the women was raped by a man who a young lawyer named Hillary Clinton was assigned to defend in court.

The Trump campaign’s plan, according to today’s Washington Post, was to place the four women in the Clinton family seating area and have them confront the former president on live television at some point in the evening.

The plan was foiled just moments before the debate was supposed to start when Frank J. Fahrenkopf, the debate commission’s co-chairman and a former Republican National Committee chairman, caught wind of the plot and warned the campaign that he’d have security personnel remove the women if this was attempted.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

Vote No on Measures A and B for a Sustainable Future for San Diego

October 10, 2016 by Jim Miller

Much of the reporting on the early campaign surrounding Measure A is falling victim to the proponents’ attempts to greenwash their deeply flawed measure by representing a few astroturf “environmental” organizations in league with big money from corporate interests and a handful of unions doing the bidding of downtown insiders as a “split” in progressive circles. This is unfortunate as the fact of the matter is that the opposition to Measure A by the Quality of Life Coalition represents a historically significant new alliance between progressive labor and nearly all of the local environmental organizations doing serious work around climate.

Two weeks ago in this space I was pleased to co-sign a column as Chair of the San Diego-Imperial Counties Labor Council Environmental Caucus along with Nicole Capretz, the Executive Director of the Climate Action Campaign, and Nick Segura, Business Manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 569, explaining why progressives should say No Way to Measure A. In that same spirit, this week I am happy to cede my usual spot to Jana Clark, a board member of both the Cleveland National Forest Foundation and Save Our Forest and Ranchlands to explain why both Measures A and B are bad for San Diego.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Environment, Land Use, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, Under the Perfect Sun

Prop 63 – Ammopalousa, GunGhazi and Second Amendmenting

October 10, 2016 by Doug Porter

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This measure is Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s baby. Prop 63 requires a background check to purchase ammo, bans possession of large capacity ammo clips, sets up a way to remove guns from felons, and requires reporting of stolen firearms/ammo.

This is all good stuff and there no denying it’s part of Newsom’s image building in the lead up to the 2018 gubernatorial contest.

Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) also has political ambitions. He’s been feuding with Newsom over who is the true leader on gun control, In July, the legislature approved bills requiring background checks for ammunition purchasers and outlaw magazines that hold more than 10 bullets.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Gun Control, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

Looking Back at the Week: October 2-8

October 9, 2016 by Brent E. Beltrán

This week’s edition of Looking Back at the Week features articles, commentaries, columns, toons, and other work by San Diego Free Press regulars, irregulars, columnists, at-large contributors, and sourced writers on: Props 57-62 & 66, police shootings, Fred Glass, skyrocketing rents, old badgers, CV’s sales tax increase, greening your wardrobe, Spanos’ trick play, ACLA seeking answers for Olango, the 5th anniversary of Occupy SD, and lots of other grassroots news & progressive views from San Diego’s friendly, neighborhood, all volunteer, slightly funky, community news site.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Looking Back at the Week

Geo-Poetic Spaces: Heirloom

October 8, 2016 by Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes

Heirloom screenshot

Nothing
for water to consume
nor wind to disseminate

No bone to char
nor ash for earth   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Books & Poetry, Columns, Culture, Geo-Poetic Spaces

Props 62 & 66 – Nay or Yea on the Death Penalty

October 7, 2016 by Doug Porter

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An eye-for-eye and tooth-for-tooth would lead to a world of the blind and toothless.–Book of Exodus [21:24]

Both points of view regarding the death penalty managed to get a measure on the November ballot.

Prop 62 will eliminate the death penalty. Prop 66 will streamline the process of executing people. If both pass, the measure with the most votes will supersede the other.

In a perfect world, there could be a discussion about the advisability of government sanctioned executions involving actual facts and figures. We won’t see much of that sort of thing this fall.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Courts, Justice, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

Chula Vista’s Sales Tax Increase: It Actually Might Be a Good Idea

October 7, 2016 by Barbara Zaragoza

Chula Vista Women's Club

Way back in February 2016 I attended a meeting of the GMOC, where a city employee said Chula Vista needs $600 million for infrastructure repairs. To address the crisis, the city considered either a half-cent sales tax hike that would bring $16 million per year, or a $200 million bond. Both would fall short of actual needs.

Bond money would come from property taxes. The half-cent sales tax would be paid at the time of the sale of goods and would not apply to certain items, such as groceries and prescription medicines. According to a survey conducted in English and Spanish, with about 880 participants, more residents supported the sales tax measure.

Thus, on our November 2016 ballot, Chula Vistans will have Measure P.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: North of the Fence, Nov 2016 Election

Prop 61 – Big Pharma Promises Revenge If It Passes

October 6, 2016 by Doug Porter

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Proposition 61 seems pretty straightforward. The price paid for prescription drugs in California state health care programs must be equal to or lower than what is paid by the Veterans Administration.

Sadly, it isn’t that simple. There’s $101 million (and counting) being spent on this measure, which only directly affects 12% of Californians.

When I saw the words “badly flawed” in ads against Prop 61, I reflexively assumed the bad guys of Big Pharma were desperate to confuse the public… But…   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Columns, Health, Nov 2016 Election, Politics, The Starting Line

Skyrocketing Rents, Same Old Housing Stock in City Heights

October 6, 2016 by Anna Daniels

Rent too high. rent control

Seventeen hundred dollars. Seventeen hundred dollars has become the standard monthly rent for a two bedroom apartment in City Heights. Over the past six months many residents who were paying around fourteen hundred dollars a month for a two bedroom apartment saw their monthly rents suddenly increase– by hundreds of dollars.

The increase in rents does not reflect a sudden investment by the property owners in additional amenities associated with gentrification. Property owners are raising the rent simply because they can. It’s the same housing stock, sometimes poorly maintained, at rental prices that are out of reach in a community with an average household income of thirty-three thousand dollars per year.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Activism, City Heights: Up Close & Personal Tagged With: City Heights

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San Diego Free Press Has Suspended Publication as of Dec. 14, 2018

Let it be known that Frank Gormlie, Patty Jones, Doug Porter, Annie Lane, Brent Beltrán, Anna Daniels, and Rich Kacmar did something necessary and beautiful together for 6 1/2 years. Together, we advanced the cause of journalism by advancing the cause of justice. It has been a helluva ride. "Sometimes a great notion..." (Click here for more details)

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