Friday, January 23, 2026

 







Today was the kickoff for Connect Bay Area, and that was quite an event too!  I planned to get there early, but I couldn't find them on Embarcadero Plaza, where they said we'd meet.  Finally, I noticed a group of people right by the Railway Museum.  It was just about to start, and I hurried into the area, accidentally standing in the lineup of public officials--Mayor Lurie, Scott Wiener, Jesse Arreguin, Myrna Melgar, Barbara Lee,  etc.   (I say "etc.", but I'm not sure all the mayors were there.  Are there some who don't favor this?!  We filled out a form online, checking boxes on what we understood was kosher in soliciting signatures, and then we got a set of petitions to get Connect Bay Area on the ballot.  I took BART back instead of the L-Car deliberately to get signatures, but I was going in the wrong direction--towards the airport!  People from Alabama and other places aren't registered to vote in the Bay Area!  

 






What a celebration City College had for the ground-breaking for the Diego Rivera Performing Arts Center!  This event got the city-wide attention it deserved, and the public who voted for this DRPAC were thanked repeatedly.  

The only surviving person who is in the mural, Donald Cairns, was there!  In the mural, he's depicted as a little boy.  

Alberto Vasquez, the Vice Chancellor for Facilities and Buildings and Grounds, did a great job as MC.  He always seems to keep his warmth and calm--even under pressure, as when he didn't think Mayor Lurie had arrived, then found out he had arrived, and  Alberto had to arrange a photo shoot close to the beginning of the ceremonies.  Fortunately, people stuck around!

Madeline Mueller got honored in many ways including with more than one standing ovation. I thought the talks were good.  Alberto Velasquez spoke and gave the land acknowledgement.  Joaquin Torres, SF Assessor-Recorder, gave a passionate speech about the Americas, immigrants, and Fascists.  The Consul-General of Mexico Marco Antonio Mena Rodriquez. (I'm not sure of the names.  I may correct later.) 

 Almost all of the "entities" at CCSF were represented.  Academic Senate president Katia Fuchs (I think), President of Classified Staff (Michael Snider?)   Rudy Gonzales was there.  But did anyone speak for the AFT2121?  

There was one heckler, when Mayor Lurie was speaking.  I couldn't make out what she was saying and don't know who she was.  

Madeline Mueller provided tiny shovels for us!  I was thrilled to get a bag with souvenirs for serving on the Citizens Bond Oversight Committee.  Trinh Tran presented us members with a sweatshirt with the Diego Rivera Mural of Pan-American Unity on the front and a sleeve saying "Diego Rivera Performing Arts Center."

Do you know who presented Madeline Mueller with the special shovel?  

Here are some photos--too many, I know, but I don't have time to be discriminant!  You'll see the third panel of the mural in the final picture with Donald Cairn, the little boy.  

Monday, January 19, 2026

Joe Garofoli's column on the Billionaire's Tax is a must-read!

 


Joe Garofoli's column on the Billionaire's Tax is a must-read!


https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/joegarofoli/article/billionaire-tax-california-state-21297701.php


Here are my favorite points:

The proposed tax on California billionaires would affect about 200 people in a state of nearly 40 million.

For the past four decades, it has been hard to persuade the poorest 99% of Americans to raise taxes on the other 1%. Much of that has to do with a federal campaign finance system that allows the wealthiest Americans — and corporations and labor unions — to give unlimited amounts to candidates. As a result, politicians have been too gutless to tax their biggest donors. 

In California, many Democrats have couched their opposition by arguing the tax would push wealthy entrepreneurs to leave the state, starving the budget of their businesses’ revenues and thus negating the impact of the tax. Experts, however, say that sort of mass billionaire exodus is unlikely. 

Wednesday, January 14, 2026


I like to have a voice, so I was happy to see my letter to the editor in the SF Chronicle yesterday, January 13, 2026.  But they left out a part about how the billionaires could pay it forward!

 

Monday, January 12, 2026

Yesterday (Sunday, January 11, 2026) I went to the  Ferry Building to participate in a protest against the killing of Renee Nicole Good and thought I was seeing Palestinian flags--though they are red, green, and black.  Instead I found a huge protest by Iranians and Iranian-Americans protesting the regime in Iran, who had shut down the Internet in Iran.  Unfortunately, things are so bad that they're longing for the return of the Shah in the form of his son, Reza Pahlavi, who's still living (in the US), and they're even asking for Trump's help..

I saw a lot of toddlers with iPhones, making it look as if they're celebrating having the Internet here!

I talked to a few of the protesters.  Then I found the group I had been looking for a bit farther west, protesting against Trump.








 

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

 

Keep Market Street Moving

I've read that since Market Street went car-free in 2020, Muni is running 14% faster, and injury collisions have decreased by 40%.  I have a car, but I really do think taking Muni is the better way to go.  A car is a gated community.  Public transportation is the world, and I like to feel like part of the world.  Other cities have managed to keep the downtown vital without cars.  We can do it too!





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I used to be able to walk to the Empire Theater from my home, but in its final days as a movie theater, they didn't turn on the heat, and they didn't even provide toilet paper in the restrooms!  I suspected that they wanted it to fail.  Now a housing development has been proposed in its place--a 64-unit, 9 story building, and as a neighbor who loves West Portal as it is, I favor this housing.  I feel for the merchants, whose businesses will be affected, and I wish there were some kind of compensation the city could give them, but I do think they'll benefit once the housing is build.  The estimate is a 2027 ground-breaking and a 2029 completion.  I hope they can stay in business until then.


  There's never a dull moment!  At our March 3rd kick off for the petition to get a parcel tax for Muni on the ballot, I noticed the ver...