Prime Time Warrior Wins Again
April 23, 2009
By Dr. Khalid |
![]() President Barack Obama shakes hand with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez at the Summit of the Americas in Tranidad-Tobago. |
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“Healthy Oakland” Clinic Serves West Oakland
April 23, 2009

From left to tight: Pastor Raymond E. Lankford, Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Dr. H. Geoffrey Watson and Bishop Ernestine C. Reems-Dickerson. Photo by Gene Hazzard.
By Angela Woodall
Oakland Tribune
Men often are nearly invisible within the health care system, especially if they belong to a minority group and are poor. That is why the Healthy Oakland-Save A Life Wellness Center, a West Oakland community clinic, set its sights on serving men who otherwise would fall through the cracks.
The programs go deep into the community’s needs, but about 87 percent of the clinic’s patients are men, the vast majority of whom are ineligible for insurance.
“What we’re witnessing today in Oakland is an example of what should be done throughout the country,” said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, standing outside the center’s yellow corner building at 2580 San Pablo Ave.
“This is an example of how we can do better,” she said Thursday during a ceremony to celebrate the center’s designation as a state-licensed community clinic, making it the only African-American, faith-based, licensed community clinic in California.
The clinic, which opened in 2004, had a lot to celebrate. The state designation means increased stability and longevity for the center because it now can bill Medi-Cal at a higher rate. That means more money for programs and patients.
The clinic really struggles every day to find the money to keep running, said Cynthia Burnett, who helps find those funds for the center. In addition, the center unveiled their new Piccolo Blood Chemistry Analyzer and a special examining table for patients with mobility problems purchased with a $25,000 donation from the Bechtel Foundation in San Francisco.
“The clinic came to be out of sheer need,” said Noha Aboelata, a consulting physician.
The clinic is one of three in the county that focuses on indigent men who have been in prison or jail and who need a wide range of services. Many suffer from hypertension and diabetes, have a history of substance abuse and mental health issues, and have unstable housing.
Just finding transportation to a clinic is a challenge, Aboelata said. “This place is right where it needs to be.”
The seed for the nonprofit was planted by Bishop Ernestine Reems-Dickerson, from the Center of Hope Community Church, and the Rev. Raymond Lankford, of Voices of Hope Community Church in Oakland, to decrease violence and health disparities. The clinic started out with a budget of about $300,000 and now operates with $3 million with the help of county support and other funding.
Bill to Protect Public Workers Gains Support
April 23, 2009
A bill to protect certain public servants and other professionals who have been the target of retribution advanced in the Assembly this week.
AB 923 will add Code Enforcement Officers, members of the Board of Equalization, certain public health officers, and veterinarians to the Department of Motor Vehicles’ protected list, providing them and their families an additional level of protection.
The bill passed the Assembly Transportation Committee on a bi-partisan 12-0 vote.
“We now face new dangers created by a new set of crimes, which pose additional threats of violence to certain employees. This bill will cover three particularly dangerous cases, one of which is illegal pit bull fighting rings, which in some cases are used to finance illegal gang activities,” said Assemblymember Sandre Swanson.
“We are also experiencing violent threats on public safety officials who monitor, report, and close drug manufacturing and drug-dealing homes, which leads to arresting violators. Finally, we have to extend protections to the only elected constitutional officers who are not covered in state law,” he said.
John Lovell, representing the California Association of Code Enforcement Officers, the California Narcotic Officers’ Association and the California Peace Officers Association testified on the dangers encountered and loss of lives by code enforcement officers in the line of duty.
“Seven of our code enforcement officers were killed in the last three years in the line of duty. In one case, an official and his entire family were murdered. AB 923 will ensure that dangerous individuals cannot use State resources to track down and harm these officers or their families” Lovell said.
Council Nixes Taxes
April 23, 2009
Quan’s Plan Quietly Quashed

Jean Quan
By Brian Lavelle
In a surprising turn of events, the Oakland City Council on Tuesday scheduled a special election for July 21, but declined to place either of two proposed major tax measures on the ballot.
Two measures were approved for the ballot. One would tax medical cannabis sales at 1.8 percent on top of normal sales tax. The other is a technical change that would ensure that a corporation’s property could be reassessed when a change in corporate ownership occurs.
The two proposed tax measures will join the “Children’s Compromise” proposal that the Council placed on ballot at their last meeting. That proposal would modify the spending formula mandated by Measure OO, the “Kid’s First” initiative passed by voters last year.
The effect would be to maintain spending on youth programs near last years levels while saving $3 million toward closing the projected $83 million deficit in the City’s hard-pressed General Fund.
The Council declined to place on the ballot two tax measures sponsored by Council Member Jean Quan. A proposed increase in the sales tax of 0.25 percent was defeated when it failed to gain the required five votes. Councilmembers Ignacio De La Fuente, Desley Brooks and Jane Brunner opposed the tax on the grounds that it would drive business away from Oakland. Council Member Larry Reid abstained.
The Council also turned down a proposed parcel tax to fund the Lighting and Landscape Assessment District. The proposal was withdrawn prior to the meeting but remained on the agenda and was put forward again when it appeared the sales tax measure would fail. Members doubted that an effective campaign could be waged by summer, however, and the proposal was again withdrawn for reconsideration in the fall.
Town Hall Meeting Looks at City’s Money Woes
April 17, 2009
By Brian Lavelle
Neighborhood residents had a chance to discuss the city’s growing budget deficit at a Town Hall Meeting Tuesday evening with Mayor Ron Dellums and Councilmembers Larry Reid and Jean Quan.
Speaking at the event, held at the East Oakland Multipurpose Senior Center, Dellums reviewed details of a projected $83 million deficit that he attributed to a precipitous fall in revenues as a result of the financial crisis. He said he has asked all city departments, except for Police and Fire, to take 20 percent cuts. He also indicated that city workers would be asked to take a 10 percent cut.
“None of these options are good options,” he said.
The Mayor also said that he met with Attorney General Eric Holder two weeks ago to discuss the City’s request for $23 million from the stimulus package to fund the Police Department. Holder indicated that the funds could be used to back-fill positions eliminated due to budget constraints, Dellums said.
All these measures would still only yield about $40 million. Three ballot measures already scheduled for a vote July 21 would raise an additional $4-5 million.
Councilmember Quan said she is sponsoring an additional ballot measure that would increase the sales tax by one-quarter of one percent and would raise about $8 million.
Dellums stressed that in shaping the budget “the most vulnerable in our community must be the most important” priority.
Among community members who spoke, a volunteer at the senior center said they feed a thousand people per week at the centers and that on the city shutdown days many have nowhere else to go. He asked why all the centers had to close down on the same day.
Several speakers expressed the hope that senior services would not be cut.
One woman suggested an earnings tax such as in New Orleans where wages and salaries earned in the city are taxed.
“Can police and fire contracts be renegotiated?” Asked another resident.
Referring to media criticisms of the mayor, a young man supported Dellums’ efforts to enhance “racial harmony” despite being “demonized in the Tribune, the Eastbay Express and the Chronicle.”
Quan also expressed irritation at the media, saying that “Ron Dellums and Chief Tucker have done more to get control of the police than anyone else.”






