An Evening With Some Community Organizers

Last night I had the pleasure of attending the 15th Anniversary Awards Dinner for LAANE (The Los Angeles Alliance For A New Economy), which brought 1,000 people to the Beverly Hilton (including Mayor Villaraigosa, Sean Penn, and more) and raised $500,000 for their cause.  I know I get depressed reading about endless budget fights and cutbacks to schools and health care, so it’s important to take comfort (and some valuable lessons) in those doing important work – and fighting some of the most powerful and entrenched interests in the city and the country – and winning.

LAANE is a group dedicated to fighting for economic and environmental justice by building coalitions and waging campaigns to improve the lives of people in underserved and at-risk communities.  Their success stories include some of the most astonishing victories of the last decade – the living-wage campaign in Los Angeles, the (eventually) successful grocery worker’s strike, the campaign to keep Wal-Mart out of Inglewood in 2004, the fight for justice for hotel workers near LAX.  More recently, they achieved success with a landmark blue-green alliance of nearly 40 environmental groups, community organizers and labor organizations like the Teamsters, to clean up the Port of Los Angeles, which resulted in a huge victory for clean air and clean water which will also provide good-paying sustainable jobs for truck drivers.  The Coalition for Clean and Safe Ports is a model for the nation, to combine economic security and respect for the environment at the ports, and Chuck Mack & Jim Santangelo from the Teamsters were honored last night (sporting leis flown in by a Teamster rep from Hawaii).

Another of their campaigns is the “Construction Career Policy,” dedicated to providing local residents in low-income communities the opportunity to get middle-class, union construction jobs on projects happening in their area.  This has resulted in thousands of jobs for at-risk and underserved communities of color, and the goal is for 15,000 jobs over the next 5 years.  Mayor Villaraigosa presented Cora Davis, a construction business owner and leading advocate for the program, with an award.

Finally, in the wake of the movie “Milk,” many are remembering the work of Cleve Jones, an activist in San Francisco during the era and the leader of the AIDS Quilt Project.  Today, Jones is a community organizer working for UNITE HERE, and he has worked with LAANE on their campaigns to create living-wage jobs and improve working conditions for the 3,500 hotel workers around LAX Airport.  Sean Penn, who became friendly with Jones over the last year working on “Milk,” presented him with an award for his service.  In his speech, Jones talked about these noble working-class people, many of them immigrants, “the ones who are serving you dinner tonight,” and he paid tribute to their struggle and dignity.  He also had a few words to say about the passage of Prop. 8, which left him heartbroken and drew eerie parallels to the Prop. 6 campaign he worked on with Harvey Milk in 1978.  But, Jones said, the real parallel moment is 1964, a time when civil rights for African-Americans in the Deep South appeared remote.  “Now is the time for Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid to sign a new Civil Rights Act restoring fundamental rights for every American in this country.”  It’s not the tactic you hear from the leading gay rights organizations, but Cleve doesn’t hold much of a brief for them either:

The new (gay rights) activists have impressed some gay rights veterans.

“They’ve shown a clear ability to turn out large numbers of people,” said Cleve Jones, a longtime gay rights advocate and labor organizer. “It’s also clear that they are skeptical of the established L.G.B.T. organizations. And I would say they have reason to be.”

Overall, it was inspiring to see a community-based organization so dedicated to restoring fairness, justice, dignity and respect to a part of a population that frequently doesn’t have a voice in political affairs, and more important, to see them get results.  LAANE is doing some great work.

Day Without A Gay: Prop 8 An Endangered Species

You might have noticed all the marches around the state and the nation after the passage of Proposition 8.  Join the Impact’s marches certainly made the issue visible. Well, a few organizers have gotten together to try to replicate the success of the Great American Boycotts aka “Day without Immigrants” by organizing “Day without A Gay.”

The worldwide media attention surrounding our massive grassweb efforts for gay rights has been tremendous.  Join the Impact was a HUGE success and will continue to thrive because of our efforts. We’ve reacted to anti-gay ballot initiatives in California, Arizona Florida, and Arkansas with anger, with resolve, and with courage. NOW, it’s time to show America and the world how we love. Gay people and our allies are compassionate, sensitive, caring, mobilized, and programmed for success. A day without gays would be tragic because it would be a day without love.

On December 10, 2008 the gay community will take a historic stance against hatred by donating love to a variety of different causes. On December 10, you are encouraged not to call in sick to work.  You are encouraged to call in “gay”–and donate your time to service! December 10, 2008 is International Human Rights Day. CLICK HERE to join us, and search or add to the list of human rights organizations that need our help RIGHT NOW.

At the same time, pollsters and demographers are predicting that Prop 8 won’t last all that long. In an article in Capitol Weekly, Rick Jacobs of the Courage Campaign echoes a sentiment felt around the state: We will be ready for another fight in 2010. The Public Policy Institute of California’s demographer Hans Johnson puts its outer limit at 10 years.

“I don’t know if I’d say two years,” Johnson said. “When you look at the age structure, there is no doubt that sometime in the next 10 years, the votes of California will accept, in the majority, gay marriage.”

In the end, the right wing has bought themselves a few years. But what was their real return? It is not like they really could use the boost for McCain’s chances here that came with a Prop 8 turnout. And it’s doubtful they even knew or cared about the other down-ballot races (Bill Hedrick anyone?). No, this wasn’t some sort of strategery, it was bigotry for bigotry’s sake.

So what did they win? They won the right to be the laughingstock of history.  Yes, you too can be a modern day George Wallace. When this book is written, and this chapter of the LGBT civil rights fight comes to a close, the only real losers are those who stood in the way of justice.

Villines: This is a stick-up

Yacht Party Assembly leader Mike Villines visited the Sacramento Bee editorial board yesterday, and like any good mob boss, he offered an ultimatum.

Solving the budget stalemate is simple enough, Assembly Republican leader Mike Villines said in a visit to The Bee’s Capitol Bureau Tuesday. Democrats have to capitulate to GOP demands for the 8-hour work day, meal breaks, looser environmental regulations, permanent budget cuts and a stiff spending cap, among other things.

Then, and only then, will Republicans come to the table to discuss — but not necessarily agree to — new taxes.

“We think you have to do these reforms first, cuts first and make sure that you’re doing an economic package that puts people back to work,” Villines said. “Then you have a discussion about revenue – and only then.”

Many of these things, you’ll notice, have nothing to do with the budget.  In fact, CapAlert published the ransom note that Villines brought with him, and while he puts his demands in somewhat vague terms (and the Bee should really spell it out if they want to inform the public), it’s pretty clear what he and the GOP want.  They want to eliminate overtime regulations and meal breaks for state employees.  They want to re-legislate already-passed environmental regulations on retrofitting buildings, cutting greenhouse gas emissions and air quality standards.  And they want a bushel of tax cuts for businesses.  I’ll put the ransom note on the flip.

Aside from being ridiculous, this is extremely close to being illegal.  Yes, illegal.  I know horse-trading is customary in politics, but it violates California law.  This is Section 86 of the California Penal Code:

86.  Every Member of either house of the Legislature, or any member of the legislative body of a city, county, city and county, school district, or other special district, who asks, receives, or agrees to receive, any bribe, upon any understanding that his or her official vote, opinion, judgment, or action shall be influenced thereby, or shall give, in any particular manner, or upon any particular side of any question or matter upon which he or she may be required to act in his or her official capacity, or gives, or offers or promises to give, any official vote in consideration that another Member of the Legislature, or another member of the legislative body of a city, county, city and county, school district, or other special district shall give this vote either upon the same or another question, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for two, three, or four years and, in cases in which no bribe has been actually received, by a restitution fine of not less than two thousand dollars ($2,000) or not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or, in cases in which a bribe was actually received, by a restitution fine of at least the actual amount of the bribe received or two thousand dollars ($2,000), whichever is greater, or any larger amount of not more than double the amount of any bribe received or ten thousand dollars ($10,000), whichever is greater.

Put it this way, there’s a Governor in Illinois who just got arrested for this activity.

But instead of indicting Mike Villines, he will be allowed to hold up the California Legislature, confident in the knowledge that Democrats, given little choice with the 2/3 requirement, will come around to his demands. In fact, Villines has already announced his intention to run for Senate in 2014, something that even cranky winger columnist Jim Boren scoffs at.  

Villines helped lead the Legislature to an 85-day budget stalemate and then was a party to passing a phony budget that quickly fell apart. And so far, he’s done nothing to solve the state budget crisis in the latest round of negotiations. And that’s the record he’ll run on for his next post?

Do our legislators live in a world where doing badly means you get to move up?

Yes, in a word.

And mind you, what Villines illegally lays out is just a precondition to TALK about revenue increases.

“This is very hard for Democrats to accept,” Villines said of his list, which he said he had been distributed to the governor and other legislative leaders. “They’ll say that look, ‘This goes right to the heart of many things that we care terribly about and we just can’t go there.’ I understand that because we feel the same way about revenues.”

Jim Evans, a spokesman for Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, challenged the Republicans to “put a specific $17 billion, half cuts, half revenues, deficit-reduction plan on the table and then we can begin productive conversations.”

Villines is holding out hope Democrats will cave. “I think that they’ll ultimately come around to this,” he said.

Why wouldn’t he say that?  A criminal who never gets caught usually keeps robbing banks.  The learned behavior is that Democrats will give up at some point.  And with General Fund revenue down another $1.3 billion in November, and the state due to run out of cash in February, who is going to disagree with him?

Or, the real question is, will anyone arrest Mike Villines for crimes against the state?

UPDATE: Denise Ducheny, Senate Budget Committee chair, sez:

“To the extent they’re saying, ‘Undo all the labor laws and we’re still not voting for taxes,’ there’s kind of nothing to talk about,” Ducheny said.

The correct response is “I am directing the Sacramento police to arrest Mike Villines.”

UPDATE 2: Even the Sac Bee describes this as a hostage crisis:

In other words, Republicans are refusing to negotiate. They will only release the hostages after their demands are met.

REGULATORY CHANGES – EMPLOYMENT LAW FLEXIBILITY

Employee Schedule Flexibility

Expanding Health Care Options for Employees (Health savings accounts)

Reducing Unwarranted Litigation

Overtime for high way earners

Meal and Rest clarification

Eliminate “needs test” to allow more apprenticeships

REGULATORY CHANGES – BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT

Design-build

Public Private Partnership

ADA compliance

Streamline small business certification process for micro businesses and sole proprietorships

Reclassify “destination management companies” (DMS) as consumers rather than retailers (SB 1628)

Streamlining the permitting process (THPS, development)

Contracting out

ENVIRONMENTAL FLEXIBILITY

Expanding deadlines for engine retrofits (on and off road)

Extending deadlines for greenhouse gas regulations (AB 32

Carl Moyer program changes

Regulatory flexibility for agricultural industry

3rd party analysis of economic impact of ARB regulations

TAX CREDITS

A new employee tax credit for businesses that hire out-of-work Californians

A manufacturing investment credit to help businesses purchase the equipment they need

Capitol gains reduction for businesses that invest in California

Modification of the tax code to encourage companies to locate jobs in California

Suspension of regulatory burdens that “discourage job creation”

Tuesday Open Thread

You know how this works, feel free to add anything you found interesting in the comments.

• Blue dog Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-Atwater) will not seek to replace Xavier Beccera as Democratic Caucus Vice-Chair if Beccera takes the trade representative post within the Obama administration. California progressive superstar Hilda Solis is still considering a run though.

• If you want your heart broken, read this story about the “Gifts for Guns” program in Compton.  The short version is that people are turning in their guns for groceries.

• It’s not just schoolkids who need subsidized lunches in this economy. Senior citizens are increasingly relying on public and non-profit programs that provide food for seniors.

• An F-18 crash in San Diego (near the Top Gun facility in Miramar) as the result of engine failure killed three yesterday.  Our condolences to the families of the victims.

• Sam Zell’s deal to buy the Tribune Company, owner of the LA Times, essentially stole from the pension funds of the Tribune employees.  The bankruptcy of the Tribune company is a sad chapter in American journalism.  One can only hope that the Times emerges stronger out of this disaster, this time without a right-wing idealogue holding them down.

Some investors are going to buy up a bunch of foreclosed homes, fix them up, and then help get qualified buyers to purchase some of the excess housing stock in the Inland Empire.

Rep. Joe Baca is having a Holiday Open House for his constituents in San Bernadino next week. Sounds like fun!