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March 25, 2025 ~ The School Finance Research Foundation found that Michigan's K-12 school buildings need $22.8 billion in repairs. Ken Gutman, Superintendent of Oakland Schools, joins Kevin to discuss the report.
Bay Area public schools are struggling, especially in Oakland and San Francisco. Both districts are among only a handful across California with negative budgets, and as a result recently voted to approve preliminary layoff notices for teachers, counselors, and other staff. This episode was produced by Alan Montecillo, Mel Velasquez, Jessica Kariisa, and hosted by Ericka Cruz Guevarra. Links: How Oakland and SF Ended Up Among 7 CA School Districts Who Can't Pay Their Bills Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
These discriminatory denials violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments and California state law. Constitutional expert, lawyer, author, pastor, and founder of Liberty Counsel Mat Staver discusses the important topics of the day with co-hosts and guests that impact life, liberty, and family. To stay informed and get involved, visit LC.org.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We're pumped to have Christopher Cobbs as our guest! Christopher's story is one for the books. From singing church hymns as a kid to studying vocal music at the Oakland School for the Arts, he's been chasing his creative spark from the start. After earning his degree in Broadcasting at San Francisco State, he launched ItsCobbsProductions and brought some amazing projects to life—like the stage show The Gift and the web series Big Girl Blues, which landed on Keke Palmer's KeyTV this year. Oh, and did we mention he's also worked with Disney Streaming and the Golden State Warriors Studio? Talk about wearing a lot of hats! Christopher's all about creating art that inspires young people to dream big and go for it. Come hang out with us and hear from a guy who's making waves in entertainment. And doing it his way. Join BraveMaker's conversation hosted by Tony Gapastione and Priscilla Lam. Watch the weekly LIVE stream on BraveMaker YouTube. Follow BraveMaker on social media: Instagram TikTok Facebook #BraveMaker #BraveMakerPodcast #LIVEstream #Filmmaking #music #entertainment
Hercules native August Lee Stevens dropped her debut album “Better Places” last year earning her a following and praise for her indie soul sound. The 25-year-old singer and songwriter started classical piano when she was in elementary school and continued her study at the Oakland School of the Arts. In her senior year, she picked up singing – a decision that changed her life. She is now part of a wave of emerging musicians from the East Bay. Stevens joins us for a special live performance, and to talk about her musical roots and journey. Guests: August Lee Stevens, Bay Area-based musician and singer-songwriter; her debut album “Better Places” came out in 2024 Frankie Maston, vocalist Ash Stallard, vocalist
0:08 — Heather Vogell is investigative reporter with ProPublica. 0:33 — Lisa Song is a reporter on the environment, energy and climate change for ProPublica. 0:45 — Ashley McBride is a reporter for the Oaklandside covering education equity. The post DOJ Sues RealPage for Algorithmic Price Fixing and Rent Inflation; Plus, Lead Contamination in Oakland Schools; And, the Future of “Recyclable” appeared first on KPFA.
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Another great episode of Total R&B is here! This week, I'm thrilled to have the incredibly talented Adrian Marcel as my guest.
Author Jeff Goodell discusses his new book "The Heat Will Kill You First" on the devastating impact of extreme heat. We'll hear an update on possible school closures in both Oakland and San Francisco. And we'll visit Rancho Obi-Wan.
In this podcast episode, Val Chapman, a finance professional, discusses mentoring elementary school students in Oakland, California. Val and her students from Franklin Elementary showcase their entrepreneurial ventures, including a comic book business, soap-making enterprise, snack business, investment portfolio, and sewing business. Through their stories, they demonstrate creativity, determination, and teamwork, highlighting the potential of early financial education. As the podcast episode progresses, Val shares her vision of expanding the program to more schools and stresses the significance of extending financial education to high schools to equip students with vital skills for the future.
It's graduation season, and so we spend the next segment of our show answering your questions about how best to support your kids in this next phase of their lives. We are joined by Wendy Snyder, a college and career counselor at the Oakland School of the Arts, where she monitors student progress and works closely in the college application process with students and families as they approach graduation. The resources mentioned by Wendy are listed below. Resources for High School graduates: Oakland Promise College Access Hub – contact them for help with financial aid and scholarships: https://oaklandpromise.org/resources/college-access-hub/ Girls Inc Alameda County – one on one support for college applications: https://girlsinc-alameda.org/programs/ Posse Bay Area, your school needs to get in touch with them in order to nominate you. And, you have to want to attend their partner schools (see in the link): https://www.possefoundation.org/sites/bay-area College Track Oakland – one on one support for high school students who are first generation to attend college: https://collegetrack.org/communities/oakland-ca/ 826 Valencia, In San Francisco – college readiness programs and also a Black Student initiative: https://826valencia.org/ Black College Expo – hosts events/college fairs all over the US and have scholarship money: thecollegeexpo.org College Essay Guy Free Resources – free guidance on building a college list and writing essays. He also has courses that are “pay what you can”: https://www.collegeessayguy.com/college-essay-resources —- Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post It's Grad Season – Resources for Graduates and Their Families w/ Wendy Snyder appeared first on KPFA.
Today, Valerie Bachelor, who went from protester to member of the Oakland Unified school board, gives us an update on Oakland school closures. Then, we hear how the legend of the Emperor Norton lives on in San Francisco. And our local music segment features the band "Fake Fruits" who are playing at The Rickshaw stop this Thursday.
Chelle Jacques is a career musician, bandleader, educator and more. In this episode she shares the story of her recently launched Daughters of the Delta Project featuring the musical contributions from the women artists of Louisiana we so rarely hear about. She also shares how she got involved with The Recording Academy, best known for producing the annual Grammy Awards. She now serves in a leadership position with the organization's California/Colorado chapter.Hear about the business of art, Chelle's powers of manifestation, and her experience being an artist and an educator who has touched the lives of thousands via San Francisco Symphony's Adventures in Music, Oakland School for the Arts, and more.Liner notes for this episode can be found here.More about Agile Vocalist, including liner notes and additional visual material for every episode can be found on the Agile Vocalist web site. Sound Cocktails, the officially intermittent, very polite, but always refreshing, podcast newsletter is how you can hear about new episodes first. Subscribe to get sips stirred with a dash of audiophile wonder sent to your email. You can also find Agile Vocalist's creator on IG Get even more lively content on the Community Page of the YouTube channel.
The newly elected Oakland school board reversed the controversial decision to shutter several elementary schools. Chronicle reporter Jill Tucker joins host Cecilia Lei to discuss how that reversal may have serious consequences across the district, as well as the financial uncertainty that continues. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mission of law & disorder is to expose, agitate and build a new world where all of us can thrive. But how do we get there? How do we build a world many of us have only seen in our dreams? That's where we believe the artists come in. So, each week we feature an artist, holding down a weekly residency with us, helping us to imagine a different, more liberated world. This week's Artist Resistance in Residence is composer and pianist Kev Choice, who has toured extensively around the world with artists from Lauryn Hill to Zion I and Michael Franti & Spearhead. He also performs his own music, teaches at the Oakland School of the Arts, and has been recently memorialized on a North Oakland mural where he shares a wall with the late Michael Morgan, conductor of the Oakland symphony. Follow Kev Choice on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kevchoice/ Listen to & purchase Kev Choice's music: https://kevchoice.bandcamp.com/ —- Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post Artist Resistance in Residence: Kev Choice appeared first on KPFA.
On this episode of tbh, we hear from recent Oakland School for the Arts graduate and Minions superfan Elizabeth Truong. She brings us along with her and her family on their recent trip to watch Minions: The Rise of Gru at the movies as she explores how theaters have changed during the pandemic.
On this episode of Crosscurrents, we hear from recent Oakland School for the Arts graduate and Minions superfan Elizabeth Truong. She brings us along with her and her family on their recent trip to watch Minions: The Rise of Gru at the movies as she explores how theaters have changed during the pandemic. Then, San Leandro City Manager Fran Robustelli speaks on a new financial incentive helping the city retain its police force.
Reactions are pouring in from Wednesday's shooting in East Oakland that affected students in several connected schools. John gets the pulse of the public on the issue of gun control and gang activity, and what should be done to prevent this tragedy from occurring again.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Reactions are pouring in from Wednesday's shooting in East Oakland that affected students in several connected schools. John gets the pulse of the public on the issue of gun control and gang activity, and what should be done to prevent this tragedy from occurring again.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
NTD News Today—9/29/2022 1. Ian's Aftermath: Major Damage and Flooding 2. Geologist: Warmer Oceans, Less Hurricanes 3. Expert: +1 Degree Warmer, Hurricane Speed +1% 4. Geologist:
Pat Thurston airs ABC special live coverage on Wednesday's school shooting in Oakland.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pat Thurston shares breaking information on Wednesday's school shooting in Oakland.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pat Thurston shares breaking information on Wednesday's school shooting in Oakland.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pat Thurston airs ABC special live coverage on Wednesday's school shooting in Oakland.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
W. Kamau Bell is the host and executive producer of the Emmy Award–winning CNN docuseries United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell, and also directed and executive produced the recent four-part Showtime documentary We Need To Talk About Cosby. He has appeared as a guest and comedian on many television shows, has two comedy specials, hosts the radio show Kamau Right Now, co-hosts two podcasts, and hosted the FXX series Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell. The author of the memoir The Awkward Thoughts of W. Kamau Bell, he has contributed writing to The New York Times, Vanity Fair, The Hollywood Reporter, and The LA Review of Books, among other places. Kate Schatz is the author of The New York Times bestselling Rad Women book series. Her other books include the work of fiction Rid of Me, articles and essays in an array of publications, and ''Folsom, Survivor,'' which was anthologized in The Best American Short Stories 2011. A political organizer and frequent public speaker, she is the co-founder of Solidarity Sundays, a nationwide network of more than 200 feminist activist groups. Schatz is the former chair of the School of Literary Arts at the Oakland School for the Arts, and she taught women's studies, literature, and creative writing at University of California, Santa Cruz; San Jose State; Rhode Island College; and Brown University. Filled with activities, ideas, games, illustrations, resources, comics, and prompts for conversations, Do the Work! challenges readers and the people in their lives to better understand systemic racism in order to dismantle it. (recorded 8/3/2022)
Fremont High School in Oakland has seen its enrollment jump, and the number of students who qualify for college admission has nearly tripled.
Welcome, to This Is America, June 2nd, 2022. In this episode, we speak with two folks involved in ongoing resistance to development by the University of California at People’s Park in so-called Berkeley. PLEASE SHARE / BOOST ⚠️We think they’re going to start arrests by June 6th. Police were on loud speakers waking up residents... Read Full Article
In February, the Oakland Unified School District announced that nearly one dozen schools will either close or be condensed into smaller sizes because of severe budget constraints. This inspired various protests in the last few months, a local educator’s 18-day hunger strike, and opposition from families and students. KCBS Radio's Sydney Fishman speaks with three teachers at the strike about the upcoming school closures, and KCBS Radio political reporter Doug Sovern about his personal experience as an OUSD parent. Subscribe to Bay Current on the Audacy app, Spotify, Apple podcasts and anywhere you get podcasts.
Mark and Bret discuss the Oakland school teacher strike & the embarrassing way Actor Olivia Wilde was served papers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mark and Bret discuss the Oakland school teacher strike & the embarrassing way Actor Olivia Wilde was served papers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Find Augusthttp://Linktr.ee/augustleestevens https://www.instagram.com/augustleestevensAbout AugustAugust Lee Stevens is a musician/singer songwriter from Hercules, CA. She got her early music education with piano and vocal studies from the Oakland School for the Arts. (Depending on if this interview is before or after June) She graduated from UC Santa Cruz with Film and Political Sciences. She was also introduced to the African American Theater Arts Troupe. She's been blessed to perform with artists such as Kev Choice, Tammi Brown, Danny Glover, and Dave GrohlShe's currently touring around the Bay Area and recording music set to release this Summer. Everyone's Music School Creating positive and lasting change in people's lives with music!Santa Cruz Movement classes help students develop spinal health, strength, mobility, coordination & more!Support the show (Http://www.patreon.com/speakforchangepodcast)
Join Jeff, aka Podcast Father on his journey as the Indie Podcaster. Episode #48 Creator Spotlight: Dominé Brishawn, a Grammy Award winning Musician. https://www.vanndigital.com/oaktownsoul-presents-domine-brishawns-new-single-red-flags/ (Dominé Brishawn)During this episode Jeff and Dominé discuss various things: Dominé's upbringing and why/how she got into music: Dominé shares her musical journey, growing up in church, choir, Oakland School for the Arts. She explains how her time at Fisk University, Nashville and performing with the Fisk Jubilee Singers made her the person she is today. She also talks about the group winning the Grammy Award, and what it's like producing/singing music professionally. They also talk about her new EP/album that dropped on March 4- https://domine.lnk.to/nothingpersonal (Nothing Personal). Thanks for listening and thanks for telling a friend! More importantly, thank you for supporting independent creators. https://domine.lnk.to/nothingpersonal (Make sure you take the time to support Dominé and give her music a listen!) https://www.podcastfather.com/ (Jeff Townsend, aka Podcast Father's website.) https://podcastgarage.fm/ (Podcast Garage Website.) https://www.yungkartzbeats.com/ (All music credited to artist Yung Kartz, check out the site here.) https://poddin.io/ (Use Poddin for your podcast transcript, they've got all the tools that make it easy and great! Use the promo code INDIEPODCASTER and receive 50% off your first month!) https://www.podpage.com/ (Use Podpage to create a beautiful, professional website for your podcast. The code FATHER will get you $20 off any pro package. ) https://indiedropin.com/creators (Podcasters, go to Indie Drop-In Network and submit your episode to be featured on an established feed/podcast.) https://riverside.fm/ (Content creators, use Riverside.fm-- the easiest way to record studio-quality podcasts and video interviews from anywhere! Use the code INDIEPODCASTER to save 30% of an annual plan or 30% off the first three months of a monthly plan.) https://podspike.com/product/pro-membership/?mref=jeff.townsend (Do you need help marketing your podcast? Podspike makes marketing your podcast easy, affordable and effective for Indie Podcasters and brands. Use the code INDIEPODCASTER to get 20% off the first month of a Pro Membership!)
Sarah Isen was born to sing. The daughter of LGBT mothers, she was conceived through an anoymous donor in Berkeley, CA and grew up in the same household with her uncle Richard Isen, a professional musician and award winning songwriter for musical theater. Richard recognized her talent at an early age and had her performing at age 8 as he accompanied her on the piano. She studied music as a youngster and eventually was accepted in the Oakland School of the Art as a singing major where she was a member of the award winning a capella group 'Vocal Rush.' At age 14 she had her first gig at a local senior center where she performed her favorite songs along with some jazz standards taught to her by her uncle Richard. In her teenage years, her donor father agreed to let himself be known and it turned out that he too sang and had been a member of a professional group years before. Because of websites like '23 and Me', Sarah has discovered 32 half siblings, many of whom also sing. They meet on yearly retreats and many of them came to Los Angeles to cheer Sarah on as she competed on 'American Idol 2020' and again when she competed on Fox's 'Alter Ego' as St. Luna.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) criticized the Republican National Committee (RNC) for its censure of Reps. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and broke with their language on the Jan. 6, 2021 riot, calling it a “violent insurrection.” “It was a violent insurrection with the purpose of trying to prevent a peaceful transfer of power after a legitimately certified election. ... That's what it was,” McConnell said. The RNC sparked fierce backlash after it described Jan. 6, when a mob of former President Trump's followers breached the Capitol, as “legitimate political discourse” in a resolution censuring Kinzinger and Cheney. Withstanding hunger pangs, weakness, and health concerns, Westlake Middle School staff members Moses Omolade and Andre San-Chez stood firm on Tuesday—day eight of their hunger strike against likely school closures in Oakland Unified School District—declaring the strike will not end until their demands are met and the school board votes against the plan, which would close or merge more than a dozen schools this year and next. The strike is one of several actions that Oakland community members have led during the last week to protest the plan, which is being proposed as a way to trim OUSD's budget deficit. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tomorrow night, the Oakland School Board will vote on whether to shut down another batch of schools, mostly in Black and Latino neighborhoods, to help balance its budget The proposal is roiling the community, with angry demonstrations and even a hunger strike to try keep these schools open. For more, KCBS Radio news anchors Patti Reising and Jeff Bell, joined by KCBS Radio political analyst and host of this segment Doug Sovern, spoke with Coach Ben Tapscott, a longtime teacher and coach in Oakland.
Oakland's school board is set to vote Tuesday on a highly controversial plan to permanently close or merge up to 15 schools over the next two years due to declining enrollment and lack of funding. “OUSD simply has too many schools and ... keeping these schools open negatively impacts all students and staff within OUSD,” district officials wrote in a statement. Students, staff, and parents have been protesting the move, and two teachers are waging a hunger strike in response. They say they were blindsided by the proposal and point to the fact that the move would disproportionately affect students of color and less affluent communities. We'll preview the vote and discuss the future of Oakland's schools.
Chris sits down with Alan Chazaro, author of Piñata Theory and This Isn't a Frank Ocean Cover Album (Black Lawrence Press), to talk about passions, process, pitfalls, and poetry! Alan Chazaro's Website Bio: I write about things. After 10 years working as a public high school teacher in Louisiana, Massachusetts, and California, I decided to pursue my creative interests more seriously and have been living as a freelancer who travels when I can to enjoy cultures around the world. I'm a San Francisco Bay Area local with Mexican dual-citizenship, existing between both countries as I continue to write, edit, teach, and grow. In 2018, I graduated with my MFA in Creative Writing from the University of San Francisco where I was a Lawrence Ferlinghetti Poetry Fellow, which is awarded to a writer “whose work embodies a concern for social justice and freedom of expression.” Previously, I attended Foothill Community College, and later UC Berkeley, where I participated in June Jordan's Poetry for the People program. I also picked up some game from Patricia Smith, among others, at the Voices Of Our Nations. My first poetry collection, This Is Not a Frank Ocean Cover Album, was the winner of the 2018 Black River Chapbook Competition and my second, Piñata Theory, was awarded the 2018 Hudson Prize. They are both available with Black Lawrence Press. Currently, I'm working as an adjunct professor at the University of San Francisco, managing an online basketball blog, HeadFake, moonlighting as a contributing writer at KQED and SFGATE, and just asking questions wherever I go. Shout out my Oakland School for the Arts students who drew portraits of me so I don't ever need to take an author photo. You can see what I'm currently thinking about here. _________________________- Check out The Poetry Question --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. President Joe Biden unveils $2 trillion infrastructure plan to revive economy and tax the rich. Day 3 of Derek Chauvin's murder trial for death of George Floyd. Civil rights groups sue state of Georgia, challenging its limits of voting rights. New York Governor signs legislation legalizing marijuana. Oakland Unified School District reopens for some in-person classes. First lady, Jill Biden, visits California agricultural district and urges farm workers to get vaccinated. New legislation would lower qualifications for sheriff candidates in California. The post President Joe Biden unveils $2 trillion infrastructure plan; Day 3 of Derek Chauvin's murder trial; Oakland schools reopen for some in-person classes appeared first on KPFA.
Photo: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks at a press conference about the Green New Deal. 0:08 – A stunning new video investigation by the Marshall Project and the New York Times examined hundreds of flights used by ICE to transport and deport detained immigrants, exposing and infecting those detained with the coronavirus, and spreading Covid-19 around the world. Barbara Marcolini (@babimarcolini) is a journalist on the visual investigations team at the New York Times, and Emily Kassie (@emilykassie) is the director of visual projects at the Marshall Project. 0:34 – It's tax day! Taxes are due today, Wednesday July 15. We take your calls and tax questions with Susan Lee, tax preparer and Certified Financial Planner, and the former host of “You and Your Money” on WBAI in New York. Susan shares wisdom about filing extensions — which are also due today — and we talk about anti-war tax resisters. 1:08 – Joe Biden has dropped a $2 trillion climate plan, drawing from many ideas in the Green New Deal. Political scientist Thea Riofrancos says the price tag on Biden's plan is promising, because climate response will warrant massive investment — but says he overrelies on promises to only use green technology that is “made in America,” which will slow the world's climate response while the planet has less than 10 years to reduce carbon emissions and get on track to a 1.5º C temperature increase. Riofrancos is assistant professor of Political Science at Providence College and author of the forthcoming book Resource Radicals: From Petro-Nationalism to Post-Extractivism in Ecuador. 1:34 – Can Oakland schools possibly safely reopen? We host a discussion with Keith Brown, president of the Oakland Education Association, and Roseann Torres, who represents District 5 on the Oakland Unified School Board. The post New investigation shows ICE spreading coronavirus around the world; Thea Riofrancos on how Joe Biden's climate plan misses the mark; and can Oakland schools safely reopen? appeared first on KPFA.
Rod and Karen discuss speaking up in the midst of whiteness, Coronavirus News, Supreme Court strikes down abortion restrictions in LA, Starbucks pauses ads on Facebook, Oakland School board eliminates police department, St. Louis lawyers point guns at black protestors, John Wayne airport being renamed, Lena Dunham speaks to her white privilege, Cookout™ Invites (White voice actors, Change.org, Jimmy Kimmel, The Chicks) and sword ratchetness. Twitter: @rodimusprime @SayDatAgain @TBGWT Email: theblackguywhotips@gmail.com Blog: www.theblackguywhotips.com Voice Mail: 704-557-0186
0:08 – Hours-long lines at the polls, scores of voters sent to nursing homes to cast their ballots, black voters not receiving confirmation of their registration, voting machines without cords, poll workers without the information necessary to operate the machines, police being called on voting rights observers — these are just some of the stories from Georgia's election day failure on Tuesday, June 9. We hear eyewitness account from LaTosha Brown (@MsLaToshaBrown). 0:34 – Public health departments are now suggesting residents form “pods” or social bubbles to protect themselves from coronavirus. How would these work? Julia Marcus, infectious disease epidemiologist and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, talks about adopting a harm reduction approach to Covid-19 safety and takes listener calls. 1:08 – There are reportedly up to a dozen cases of Covid-19 inside San Quentin now. We talk to James King of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights about the conditions inside the prison, and what he is hearing from inside. King was incarcerated in San Quentin until last year. He also sounds the alarm over prisoners being put in solitary confinement as a form of “quarantine.” 1:34 – The California Assembly is about to vote on whether to put a measure on the state ballot in November that would allow voters to decide to repeal Proposition 209, a measure that banned all race-based decisionmaking and affirmative action programs in California. A broad coalition of civil rights, racial justice and community groups and labor unions is supporting the measure, but votes have been on party lines. Vincent Pan, co-executive director of Chinese for Affirmative Action, talks about the fight to repeal 209. 1:47 – The Oakland Unified School District board will soon consider a “George Floyd Resolution” that would dissolve their special school police department. This is a fight that advocates have waged for over four years — we talk with Desiree Mims of the Black Organizing Project about why eliminating police in schools is a crucial component of dismantling the school to prison pipeline, and her own experience being policed and pushed out of schools. Photo from Twitter user @Aleetzia19 The post Will Oakland schools finally dissolve their police force? Plus, an eyewitness account of Georgia's election disaster; and affirmative action could go to CA ballot in fall appeared first on KPFA.
Today, we hear about a possible teachers strike at Oakland Unified along with some painful school closures. Then, the story of a great grandmother, who lives her best life by helping others eat healthy. And, Audiograph will give us a taste of Vietnam at a South Bay mall.Links:
Why are struggles over Oakland schools' budget and policies always in the news? Is it really because Oakland is irresponsible? Or has it actually been a 30-year struggle about the forcible installation of a state administration that spent $100 million dollars without accountability to Oakland residents? The post Oakland Schools, the Back Story on Civil Rights and State Take-overs appeared first on KPFA.
Steven and I go way back as we attended the University of Michigan together many moons ago. Trust me, it's true, we look younger than we are. His witty Facebook posts of questions led me to reach out to him which resulted in this fun conversation. Steven Snead is originally from Detroit, MI. He attended the University of Michigan for his undergraduate degree and he went on to attend Wayne State University for his Masters in Educational Leadership. He is currently the Supervisor of Curriculum and Assessment and a Research, Evaluation and Assessment Consultant at Oakland Schools.
First Host Kitty Kelly Epstein is joined by Oakland School Board Member Shanthi Gonzales to discuss the Oakland School District's urgent budget crisis and then they get into some discussion around the long term plan the school board seems to have adopted to close or consolidate more schools. Shanthi Gonzales is the school board member for district 6 in East Oakland. And closing out the show is some talk about new developments around housing and renter protections. The post Education Today – Oakland School District Budget Crisis & Longer Term School Closure Plan March 24, 2017 appeared first on KPFA.
Oakland School disowns the Sleeper 13 Productions anti gun PSA,Daily Mail repeats meme that Fast and Furious was a "Botched" gun sting,Unraveling the anti gun talking points,Australians look at the US versus the UK in light of recent Islamist attacks,Gun rights make the difference when security fails,The "UnArmed" versus deady force myth,Whats coming up for Lock N Load in 2015, School lockdown because of text message with picture of gun. Merry Christmas