Category Archives: SF Election – November 4, 2003

Reader Question To Tom Ammiano: What About SF Bay Guardian Publisher Bruce Brugmann’s Endorsement Of Angela Alioto?

Steve Rhodes asked me to ask Tom Ammiano the following question:
“Ask him what he thought of Bruce Brugmann’s endorsement of Angela and if it
was a bit hypocritical for a paper that has decried the influence of money
in politics gave one reason for supporting her that she is rich and can
spend her own money in the runoff.”
Steve
http://ari.typepad.com
So I did. Here’s
Tom’s Response
(Small – 3 MB)

Why Vote Yes On Prop B?

I don’t have time to transcribe this one. But here’s Tom on voting “Yes” on Prop B.

How I’m voting this Tuesday

This footage is from October 31, 2003.
I took advantage of having access to Tom Ammiano in person Friday to ask him about the other propositions on the ballot. What he said makes sense to me. I hope it will be helpful to you in making your decisions about tomorrow’s elections.
Video clip – Why YES On Prop B (1 MB)

Why Vote Yes On Prop D?


How I’m voting this Tuesday

This footage is from October 31, 2003.
I took advantage of having access to Tom Ammiano in person Friday to ask him about the other propositions on the ballot. What he said makes sense to me. I hope it will be helpful to you in making your decisions about tomorrow’s elections.
Video clip – Why YES On Prop d (2 MB)
Lisa: “What about D? Something about a small business commission?”
Tom: “Eh. You know, it takes the commission that now exists and makes it a charter commission, and people who are involved in small business feel that it would give them more status and a little more juice. I think the jury is out about whether or not that could happen, because a lot of times things are just very decorous. But perhaps it could work, and I’m not against small businesses so, ya know, fine.”

Why Vote NO On Prop N?

This is another great example of why I think Tom Ammiano would be a great Mayor.
He has great reasons for not wanting N to pass, and an excellent alternative to it: providing health benefits and disability benefits for all taxi drivers (not just disability for only drivers with medallions – as N proposes).
More details below.

How I’m voting this Tuesday

This footage is from October 31, 2003.
I took advantage of having access to Tom Ammiano in person Friday to ask him about the other propositions on the ballot. What he said makes sense to me. I hope it will be helpful to you in making your decisions about tomorrow’s elections.
Video clip – Why YES On Prop N (5 MB)
Lisa: “What about N? For taxi permits…”
Tom: “You know, my father was a cab driver in the 50’s and 60’s before he died. There were no benefits. There were no health benefits. When he died, we had to practice an Italian-American custom called La Boost (sp?) where people actually come to the funeral, which you don’t pay for yet, and they make a donation. And I thought ‘ya know, nobody has to go through this.’ Particularly Taxi drivers.
However, this is a very self-serving avaricious measure that I think is very dishonest. In the world of taxi drivers there are people with permits and then there are people without permits, and this is a way to get the people with permits only some kind of disability benefits. It really shuts the door on anyone else, and I don’t like that. And I tried to get something on the ballot that would encompass not just the permit (medallion) holders, but the other drivers too. To me, there was a way that we could have done it for everyone.
So I’m not supporting N because I think it is dishonest. I don’t want to deny disability to people, particularly with my personal background, but there is another way to do it. And by the way, my office worked with the waring parties, and their very very very angry with each other and don’t talk to each other a lot. Within the taxi industry there are three or four factions and we are moving towards providing health benefits for all taxi drivers. And if it ever passes, and we get the cooperation of everyone, I’d like to call it the “Joe Ammiano Law,” because that was my dad.
Lisa: “So that one you’re stronger about. You think it’s a big NO on that one.”
Tom: “Oh yes. It’s going to be very harmful. And we’ll just leave it at that.”

Why Vote Yes On Prop C?


How I’m voting this Tuesday

This footage is from October 31, 2003.
I took advantage of having access to Tom Ammiano in person Friday to ask him about the other propositions on the ballot. What he said makes sense to me. I hope it will be helpful to you in making your decisions about tomorrow’s elections.
Video clip – Why YES On Prop C (3 MB)
Lisa: “So what about C? About having the City Controller monitor city services?”
Tom: “You know, Jake Mc Goldrick is going to kill me for this. I’m not real happy with this one. They cleaned it up quite a bit and, ya know, I’m OK with it. But personally, if it didn’t pass, I wouldn’t kill myself. It’s one of those things where a conservative group, called S.O.S., wanted to, in their words “have more open government and honest government,” but it really is a little more self-serving than that. I think Jake Mc Goldrick did a really good job of cleaning it up and making it palatable. It will give the Controller of our city the ability to audit independently, and I think that’s a fine idea. However, I think there are better ways to do it. We could have a General Manager that’s elected. The Controller is appointed by the Mayor for 10 years. We have a very good controller. However, I still think there’d be a better way to do what this measure is supposed to accomplish. But I will vote for it.”
Lisa: “You will vote for it?”
Tom: “Yeah. But it’s not one of my favorites.”

Why Tom Ammiano Is The Six Million Dollar Man



So I’ve let Tom talk a lot about how he feels about the various issues, and I suppose my strategy was that doing so would speak for itself with regard to why I’m supporting him for Mayor.
However, as I was wrapping up my archive of his interview, I came across this clip (5 MB) of him explaining in more detail about the six million dollar renewable federal grant he was able to obtain from the Shrub Administration.
This achievement demonstrates several of the reasons why I think Tom would be a great mayor:
1. His ability to work within the system to accomplish results, even if the people running “the system” are questionable, to say the least.
2. His ability to create “real” solutions to “real” problems, such as homelessness, as opposed to taking the easy way out, like blaming the victims. (Such as I believe to be the case with “Care Not Cash” and its new bastard brother Proposition M.)
3. His ingenuity in coming up with something like a renewable grant that can continue to bring money into the city to help the less fortunate, rather than come up with strategies that will actually cost the city over $900,000 and give police unprecedented power to arrest people for literally doing nothing.
But I’ll let Tom explain the details to you in his own words:
Tom Ammiano On The 6 Million Dollar Renewable HUD Grant (Small – 5 MB)
The words below came after our discussion of Prop M (2 MB).
Tom: “…like my ability to get six million bucks from the Bush government two weeks ago, so we could have supportive housing and services for the mentally ill and homeless. Now that’s real, and that’s happening as we speak.”
Lisa: “Right. I actually wanted to ask you more about that, because you brought that up in the debate. (6 MB) After a Judge sort of threw out “Care Not Cash” that you were able to get some money to actually build some housing? Could you talk some more about that?”
Tom: “Yeah. It’s not for “building housing,” actually, but I understand why people think that. I mean it could eventually. But it’s six million bucks of support from HUD, which is Bush, and I actually worked with Mayor Willy Brown.
See, because, what Gavin has not been able to do is take the partisanship out of the issue. And I’m willing to sit down with whomever and even compromise, so that we come up with real solutions. So it’s six million bucks from HUD for supportive housing and direct services.”
“So you take a hotel that’s there already and you rehab it. And we’ve done this, but only for a very tiny amount of people. You rehab it and provide the room, which is housing, particularly for the mentally ill and people who have been ill and homeless on our streets for over a year. That’s about 2,000 of them — even if “Care Not Cash” was something that could work, it wouldn’t affect these people, because they’re mostly under SSI and Federal programs — and then provides all the services right there in that facility. And we’ve already started in the Bay View little Ramada Inn there, has been rehabed. A woman named “Mother Brown” is actually the recipient of some of this money. And the rooms are full already with the services being provided and we’re going to expand that so we can meet the needs of 1,000 or more people that are on our streets. And this is a renewable grant. That’s the beauty of it. So, with our success that we’re proving this year, we have a really great shot at getting that six million next year as well. So that, again, that’s real.

Good Morning: Remember To Vote Today!

I’m almost finished with my pre-election info coverage. Just a few more clips to go and the rest will be up to you.
Thanks for paying attention. I had 1,600+ people on my site yesterday, and that’s a good day for me, so I guess somebody saw this stuff. Hope it was helpful.
I’m going to finish up the Ammiano interview — just because I’m trying to finish what I start these days. Then I can get to those other clips I promised (Dean on 60 Minutes and on BET and in SF last week, Rummy spouting off the usual rubbish on Meet The Press about his memo), and I also have a special message of faith from the South Park kids about filesharing I can’t wait to get up.
Someone sent me a really important article about scary shit like the reinstatement of the draft that you can bet will get more of my attention in the near future. (Once the dust clears from all this election stuff.)
Soon I’ll need to get my “Agent” attire together for the music video that Ryan Junell is shooting tonight for the Mayhem Mysitcs. As far as I know, he is still looking for other people to be Agents (and Agents w/video cameras), so if you’re interested, shoot me an email and I’ll give you the details. He’s shooting tonight and tomorrow on location here in San Francisco. (lisarein@finetuning.com)
Well I’d better get to work!

Why Vote Yes On Prop E?


How I’m voting this Tuesday

This footage is from October 31, 2003.
I took advantage of having access to Tom Ammiano in person Friday to ask him about the other propositions on the ballot. What he said makes sense to me. I hope it will be helpful to you in making your decisions about tomorrow’s elections.
Video clip – Why YES On Prop E (6 MB)
Lisa: “E. It just says “ethics reform.”
Tom: “Oh. This is good. I sponsored this with the Ethics Commission. Basically, it’s about conflict of interest. A lot of times, people will be in city government such as a department head, or a commissioner, or the mayor, or a supervisor, and then they no longer do that. But, because their faces are recognizable. Because the juice is still there, even though they’re gone, they have undue influence on decision making, and they also get more access, and they can also bring people in. So this really tightens that and says if you were a mayor or supervisor or commissioner or department head or have been involved in any way on that level, you can not come back and lobby for issues. In otherwords, giving you an insider’s advantage. If we’re really gonna have honesty in government, we need a lot of campaign reform and we need a lot of ethics reform. And Prop E addresses that, and I think it’s great. We should be very proud of it.”
Lisa: “Can you give an example of when that kind of thing happens?”
Tom: “Well let’s say Mayor Willie Brown will, after 8 years, no longer be the Mayor, but he certainly will have juice with certain commissioners because he appointed them, and their term goes beyond his. And so it wouldn’t be (can’t make out exact word) of him currently to give them a call and say ‘I want to introduce you to this developer’ etc. and so forth. There’s been a number of supervisors, Michael Yahi comes to mind, who, after they were not voted back in office, you start to see them in the halls, using some of the connections they had with the different departments to lobby for certain issues.”
Lisa: “So it would make that illegal?”
Tom: “Yes.”
Lisa: “Isn’t that just going to drive it ‘behind close doors’ so to speak?”
Tom: “No, actually, it’s going to flush it out. This comes on the heels of the disclosure and the Sunshine that we also sponsored. So, some people would say ‘alright, I will disclose that I, as a previous supervisor, went and talked to so and so. So what?’ So alright fine, now you disclose it, and now we say because of the position that you held before, it’s a conflict of interest defined by the State, and particularly by San Francisco, in a very stringent manner. You can’t do it. But the average citizen should be able to come in and have the same kind of access that you’re trying to say you have because you used to be a super or mayor. So it really does level that playing field.”

Just Added Descriptions Of The Various Propositions From The Youth Vote Coalition To My Voting Table and Detailed Explanation Pages

I just added some brief descriptions from a flyer I picked up from the Youth Vote Coalition.
Every one of their recommendations matches up with what Ammiano recommends, so I thought it would help flesh out the issues a bit to include what they say about the propositions in the explanations in my
easy voting table and
detailed explanation page.