Zennie62 on YouTube

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Oakland Mayor Jean Quan Recall Effort Gains $100,000




The latest news in the Occupy Oakland constellation of information is the effort to recall Oakland Mayor Jean Quan.  According to an email from a source, Sanjiv Handa, East Bay News Service reports that $100,000 has been pledged toward the effort to recall the Mayor. 

Also, the latest Occupy Oakland news is that Oakland Police and law enforcement will move in to clear the encampment at Frank Ogawa Plaza at 4 AM, Monday, November 14th.

Here's the text from the email sent to Zennie62.com:

FYI from Sanjiv Handa, East Bay News Service:

The Oakland Bulletin SM
The Authoritative Source About Every Nuance of Oakland Politics and Process Since 1994   SM


$100,000 Pledged to Qualify Quan Recall
A petition to force an election to recall Mayor Jean Quan has been certified for the signature-gathering phase. Proponents have a maximum of 160 days to turn in about 19,800 signatures from registered Oakland voters on petitions that are now available.

Special interest groups and political activists have been monitoring the process with great interest. In just the past few days, they obtained pledges of $100,000 to pay experienced petition circulators — at the prevailing rate of $5 for each signature. More money is being sought.

By contrast, when rumors circulated about a recall of former mayor Ron Dellums — which did not ever get started — barely $30,000 had been pledged, leading unnamed proponents to drop the idea. Because no recall committee was ever formed, nor checks ever written, there was no legal requirement for any disclosures.

The California Fair Political Practices Act says a committee must register and disclose its key officers within thirty days of receiving checks or pledges in excess of $1,000. The Fair Political Practices Commission, a five-member panel with paid staff in Sacramento, administers that law.

Multiple sources say the Latino Political Action Committee has pledged $20,000. In part, their members are angry that Quan bypassed an in-house candidate for fire chief, opting instead to conduct a national search.

The target is to obtain 26,000 signatures — a thirty percent margin of error to allow for signatories who turn out not to be registered to vote. Any United States citizen who has lived in Oakland for more than thirty days can register as a voter and sign a recall petition after that.

A coalition of 71 Oakland residents launched the first step in the process, but only 56 of them turned out to be registered voters. The required number is a minimum of fifty.

The coalition published a notice of intent in the Montclarion newspaper on Nov. 4, the same day that the city clerk published a mandated notice in the Oakland Tribune. Both notices have a minor defect, stating that Gene Hazzard, who signed on behalf of the coalition, executed his signature on Oct. 24, 2021 — instead of 2011.

The Montclarion has cheaper advertising rates than its sister paper, the Tribune. However, it only publishes once a week, so insertion of the intent did not appear in print for eight days after the ad was placed. The seven-days-a-week Tribune’s lead-time for such ads is usually two business days.

City offices were closed Thursday and Friday, so the city attorney or city clerk will decide next week if that typographical error constitutes a material defect that would require republication of either or both notices. If the process needs repeating, the issuance of actual petitions could be delayed up to two weeks.


Recall is a First in Modern Oakland Politics
City records are sketchy, so there is no proof that Oakland has ever had an election to recall a mayor, council member, or other officeholder.

East Bay News Service archives date back to 1966, and show no record of any recall drive in that 45-year period. More than a dozen local politicians and activists also cannot remember any recall effort being launched in that span.


Any County Voter Can Circulate Petitions

Anyone registered to vote in Alameda County can circulate the recall petitions, which have room for just five signatures on each sheet. Allegations against Quan, her response, and an affidavit to be signed by the person who obtained the signatures fill up each page.

However, only voters residing in Oakland can sign them and vote in the recall election, if held.

Contradictory Views on Election Laws
Community activists have been issuing their own opinions and interpretations of how a recall works. As a result, considerable confusion and misinformation has been burning up cyberspace.

Oakland does not have any local procedures for a recall election. Consequently, provisions of the state Elections Code govern the process.

From the initial release date of petitions, a maximum of 160 calendar days is allowed for a jurisdiction with more than 50,000 registered voters. [Elections Code § 11220(a)(5)]

Petitions can be submitted at any time within that period. However, all signatures must be turned in at the same time, or they will not be counted. [Elections Code § 11220(a)]

The city clerk will perform a preliminary count to ensure that more than 19,800 signatures were submitted. [Elections Code § 11220(b)]

Standard practice is for the city clerk to send the petitions to the Alameda County Registrar of Voters to perform the actual verification. The county charges the city a fee for this service.

The clerk is allowed thirty days, not counting Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, to determine if enough signatures are valid to proceed with a recall election. [Elections Code § 11224(a)]

The registrar is allowed to use a random sampling of five percent of the signatures submitted. [Elections Code § 11225(a)]

If, for example, 26,000 signatures are turned in, a minimum of 1,300 are checked in the county voter registration database. If that examination shows that the validity rate exceeds 110 percent, the petition for recall will be certified. [Elections Code § 11225(b)]

The required 19,800 signatures are 76.2 percent of the 26,000 submitted. A 110 ratio would require an 83.8 percent validity rate.

If the validity rate for the sample falls between 90 and 110 percent, every one of the signatures must be matched to the voter database [Elections Code § 11225(c)]

If the validity rate for the sample is below 90 percent, the petition is denied without further testing [Elections Code § 11225(d)]


Choosing Successor is on the Same Ballot
The recall election will ask: “Shall Jean Quan be recalled?” — with a yes or no option. On the same ballot will be the names of every person who has qualified for mayor by submitting a minimum of fifty valid voter signatures and a $300 filing fee no later than 75 days before the election. [Elections Code § 11381]

Each voter has the right to a “yes” or “no” — but is not obligated to mark either option in order to vote for a successor candidate.

If one-half or more of those casting ballots vote “no”, Quan remains the mayor. [Elections Code § 11383]

If one-half or more of those casting ballots vote “yes”, Quan will be removed from office. [Elections Code § 11384]

The candidate receiving the highest number of votes cast for a successor would replace Quan and serve until Jan. 2015 [Elections Code § 11385]
Stay tuned.

Occupy Oakland: Don Macleay, Wilson Riles Call For No Eviction

At a press conference Sunday evening, Don Macleay, head of the Oakland Green Party, Wilson Riles, long-time Oakland activist, Vicki McGuire, mental health professional, and Naomi Shiff, Oakland architect and preservationist, all called for Oakland Mayor Jean Quan to avoid what will almost certainly be a violent removal of the Occupy Oakland encampment. 

Here are videos from the press event held at the Oakland City Hall Steps, Sunday at 4:30 PM.











Occupy Oakland protestor and encampment dwellers received a third eviction notice on Sunday. 

Stay tuned.

Oakland Activists Call Occupy Oakland Press Conference At City Hall Today

Oakland Activists Call Occupy Oakland Press Conference At City Hall Today
Oakland Green Party Head Calls For Stop To Planned
City Of Oakland Eviction at 4:30 PM PST

For Immediate Release
Contact: Don Macleay at 510-290-1200

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Oakland Green Party Head and 2010 Oakland Mayor's Race Candidate Don Macleay, and long time Oakland Activists Wilson Riles, and Vicki McGuire will hold a press conference today, and will be joined by other Occupy Oakland participants on the steps of Oakland's City Hall.   They will assemble right in front of the Oakland City Hall steps, just 150 feet from the main Occupy Oakland General Assembly Meeting Area at Frank Ogawa Plaza, near 14th and Broadway. 

Here's Mr. Macleay's prepared statement:



<blockquote>We the undersigned are making a proposal to the General Assembly calling for a PUBLIC FORUM on Thursday Nov. 17 on the subject of HOW TO HARMONIZE THE OCCUPY OAKLAND PROTEST WITH THE OAKLAND COMMUNITY AT LARGE

The procedure is to hand in such proposals to the Facilitation Committee the day before the General Assembly where the proposal will be discussed.

That we are doing today and wish to have this proposal discussed at the General Assembly tomorrow.

---------------------------------

We are also calling a press conference today at 4:30 on the steps of City Hall to ask the City of Oakland not to proceed with a forced eviction. Recent statements by our mayor lead us to believe that a repeat of the last eviction fiasco is imminent.

We need peace in our city and another eviction is not a peaceful way to proceed.

The City and Occupy Oakland need to dialog and to do so, each has to understand the way the other is organized.

In the case of the City, they need to deal with Occupy Oakland via the General Assembly process,
which they have not really done, and this public forum proposal is the way to get this dialog started.
By PUBLIC FORUM we mean the whole public.

That includes the many of us who support the Occupy encampment and also all the other residents.

Present at the Press Conference will be

Don Macleay
Wilson Riles
Vicki McGuire

And all others who support this initiative who wish to come.
Given the short notice</blockquote>

Stay tuned.

Visit the new Zennie62.com

Zennie62 blog net

 
Google Analytics Alternative