Oakland families can't wait any longer for safe neighborhoods.
For effective violence prevention, vote YES on R.
Crime and violence have become the most serious problem
facing our city. The number of homicides in Oakland
has increased by 50% over the last two years. YES on R
is a comprehensive approach to reducing crime and
violence,
before it starts.
YES on R will provide job training and employment
opportunities
for young adults.
YES on R will expand after-school and parent
involvement
programs for Oakland schoolchildren.
YES on R will expand early childhood intervention
programs
for children exposed to violence in the home.
YES on R will improve counseling and mentoring
programs
for at-risk youth.
YES on R will establish community-based specialist
teams within the Oakland Police Department trained to
deal with mental health, domestic violence, and conflict
resolution.
YES on R includes strict financial accountability
requirements,
to ensure that money is spent as promised. Funds
will be closely monitored by an independent Citizens'
Oversight Committee, including guaranteed annual audits.
With the state budget crisis costing Oakland millions each
year, YES on R is the only way to protect funding for
youth, family, and violence prevention programs.
YES on R is a balanced, fiscally responsible program
that
combines the best aspects of violence prevention and job
programs with enhanced community policing services.
Nothing will end Oakland's crime and violence overnight,
but the cost of doing nothing is too high.
That's why community leaders, business organizations,
and elected officials who often don't see eye-to-eye have
come together to face the problem of crime and violence
head-on.
Please join Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Mayor Jerry
Brown, Vice Mayor Nancy Nadel, Councilmembers
Brooks, Chang, and Reid and Police Chief Richard Word
in supporting YES on R.
s/BARBARA LEE
Member of Congress
s/JERRY BROWN
Mayor, City of Oakland
s/KIMBERLY MIYOSHI
Executive Director, Oakland Kids First!
s/BISHOP ROBERT L. JACKSON, Chairman,
Oakland African American Chamber of Commerce
s/TONY PAAP, President & CEO,
Children's Hospital & Research Center
Oakland does need effective violence prevention, but Oakland
voters will not get it by passing Measure R.
Stopping violence requires much more thought and planning
than went into Measure R. The measure was put
together hastily in an effort to get tax dollars for 2004.
The measure compiles a list of broad concepts for funding
that is much too general to assure voters of any working
solution to violence. Under this measure, it will be up to
the City Council to allocate $110 million in additional
taxes. Yet, there is no consensus on the Council, and no
clear direction in the measure, on any coherent strategy.
The likely result is a grab bag of "pork-barrel" projects,
each spending money on its separate administration with
no coordination among them.
At a time when a growing list of critical government services
need more tax dollars, Oakland's city leaders need to
outline a proven and coordinated approach for violence
prevention before asking for a parcel tax to fund them.
Many other cities have greatly reduced street violence by
creating teams of social service providers and law enforcement
officers that work together in the neighborhoods and
with families. But the City leaders of Oakland have not yet
examined what works or agreed on what would work best
in Oakland.
Tell your City leaders to discuss, agree and come back
with a specific and working strategy for violence prevention
for the November election. Demand results, not more
bureaucracy. Vote NO on Measure R.
s/IGNACIO DE LA FUENTE
President of City Council
s/DANNYWAN
Oakland City Councilmember
s/KEN LUPOFF
Oaklanders for Effective Crime Control
| This measure, while well intended, is seriously flawed.
It imposes $110,000,000 over ten years in additional taxes
with no evaluation of whether the programs actually
reduce violence or crime. At a moment when murder and
violence in Oakland escalate, the measure provides neither
more police officers nor training for better community
policing.
Nationally, Oakland has fewer than half the number of
sworn officers as other cities of comparable size. Yet this
measure does not require hiring additional officers. We
need more training of officers to improve community
policing techniques and to prevent police abuse, yet there
is no requirement for more training. The language speaks
only of expanding current police programs.
The measure contains no standards for the performance
of the unnamed organizations that will receive
funds. A citizen's oversight committee only verifies that
money is spent. And the City Auditor examines only
whether spending is "in accordance with the objectives
stated". There are no stated performance objectives.
The taxing scheme for this measure is blatantly unfair.
Whether a home is worth $200,000 or $2,000,000, all single-
family homeowners pay an equal amount. And a
multi-unit apartment complex, no matter how big, only
pays a maximum of twice the amount that a single homeowner
pays.
This measure was hurriedly written without the normal
public-input process. A group hand-picked by a single
councilmember, drafted the language in private meetings.
The City Council then placed it on the ballot after only a
twenty-minute public discussion.
We need a safety plan that offers real protection for our
neighborhoods. Send this measure back to the Council to
fix it and place it on the November ballot. Please join us in
voting NO.
s/FRANK ROSE
s/KEN LUPOFF
Oaklanders for Effective Crime Control
s/GARY SIRBU
Oakland can't afford to wait any longer to solve our crime
and violence problems. Homicides in the city have increased
50% over the last two years. How many more of
our young people will have to die before we finally take
action to stop the violence?
Violence prevention programs in Oakland work. For
example,
youth repeat offenders participating in Oakland's
Pathways to Change program are 86% less likely to commit
another crime. Measure R would allow us to expand
crime reduction programs that show significant results.
Measure R will fund job training, mentoring, after-school,
and violence prevention programs to stop crime before it
starts and will also allow the Oakland Police Department
to hire 30 additional community police officers.
Measure R ensures effectiveness and accountability by
mandating detailed performance evaluations each year.
Those programs that don't meet established standards
won't be renewed.
Measure R specifically exempts low-income homeowners,
to protect Oakland residents living on limited or fixed
incomes.
Measure R was developed over 12 months by the Violence
Prevention Working Group including Mayor Jerry Brown,
Vice Mayor Nancy Nadel, Police Chief Richard Word, and
three dozen prominent education and policy experts, youth
and youth advocates, and religious and community leaders.
It's time to stop talking about crime and violence and start
doing something about it. Our kids, our families, and our
city can't wait any longer. Please join us in voting YES on
R.
s/Mayor JERRY BROWN
s/Vice-Mayor NANCY NADEL
s/DON LINK, Chair,
Community Policing Advisory Board
s/TERRY SANDOVAL, National Women's
Political Caucus+Alameda North, PAC Chair
s/FRANK TUCKER, Tucker Technologies, Chair,
Oakland Workforce Investment Board
|