With thousands of jobs at stake, Oaklanders ask Army Base Developers to sign good jobs contract
Revive Oakland! Coalition launches as
Crucial city, port decisions near on huge job-creating project
What: Rally and news conference to
launch the new Revive Oakland! coalition and unveil a proposed "Contract with
the community" to guarantee good jobs for Oakland residents from the
redevelopment of the massive former Oakland Army Base.
When:
Thursday, June 17, 2010, 12:00 PM
Where: Oakland City Hall, 1
Frank Ogawa Plaza
Who: Organized by the Revive Oakland! Coalition
for Real Jobs and Healthy Communities (Alliance of California for Community
Empowerment, East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy, Center for Third World
Organizing, The Workforce Collaborative, Alameda Labor Council).
Featuring: • Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson, Oakland
Councilmembers Rebecca Kaplan, Jean Quan • Rev Clarence Johnson, Mills Grove Christian Church • Josie Camacho, Alameda Labor Council, AFL-CIO • East and
West Oakland residents who would benefit from the project - including a job
training graduate and a long-time West Oakland Resident - available for
interviews.
Media visuals: Elected officials and community
members will sign a giant "good jobs for Oaklanders" contract; signs and banners
at rally
Background: On the eve of the release of fresh
unemployment statistics for Alameda County, a new community coalition will call
upon the developers of the former Oakland Army Base to sign a "contract with the
community" to ensure that the enormous redevelopment project creates quality
jobs that are accessible to Oakland residents. The launch of the Revive Oakland!
coalition and unveiling of the proposed contract comes weeks before both the
City of Oakland and the Port are expected to take significant votes on the
redevelopment of the former Base.
Key elements of the contract include a
commitment to creating quality jobs, funding for community job training center,
and hiring local residents.
"This 'contract with the community' is a
concrete and common-sense proposal to revitalize our city and regional economy,
by making sure the Army Base Redevelopment brings real jobs to Oakland
residents," said Nikki Bas, Executive Director of the East Bay Alliance for
a Sustainable Economy, one of the members of Revive Oakland! With a site the
size of 200 football fields, and millions in public money at stake, we have a
once in a lifetime opportunity to put up to 8,000 Oaklanders to work in good
jobs and provide a skilled workforce to local business."
One day after
the launch, the Bureau of Labor Statistics is expected to release the latest
unemployment statistics for Alameda County. While the US Census may provide a
temporary lift, in April Oakland's unemployment was a staggering 17.3%. "If
everyone had a job, Oakland would have hope," said James Smith, Oakland
resident and graduate of the ATLAS job training program. The Army Base
redevelopment could bring thousands of new construction, forklift, warehouse,
and port-related jobs to Oakland.
The Army Base closed in 1994 and the
Federal Base Reuse Authority returned the property to the City of Oakland and
the Port of Oakland in 2006. In 2008, the City issued a request for proposals,
incorporating several community demands concerning jobs. Both the City and Port
have signed "exclusive negotiating agreements" with local developer Phil
Tagami's California Capital Group and international property corporation
AMB.
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