August 1, 2016

Celebrating Medicare’s Birthday & Wishing Medicare for All


Sheila Kuehl and Jackie Goldberg
PNHP Medicare for All Event  July 24  Santa Monica
photo credit Susan Cloke


the Billionaires
photo credit Susan Cloke

Celebrating Medicare’s Birthday &Wishing Medicare for All

Susan Cloke
Columnist









Dressed in tails and evening gowns the singing group, “The Billionaires” poked tuneful barbs charging profiteering by Health Care Companies in the United States.

Listening, sometimes singing along, sitting in a beautiful Santa Monica garden, were a large group of people who had come to celebrate the birthday of Medicare and to support the work of the PNHP CA (Physicians for a National Health Program CA) to open Medicare to all Americans.

Council Members Ted Winterer and Gleam Davis welcomed everyone to the event and spoke of the City Council official statement in support of Single Payer in CA.

State Senator Ben Allen spoke about the successful work of the State Legislature to extend Medicaid to the children of undocumented workers in CA and their ongoing work with the Federal Government for a waiver to allow undocumented workers to be able to buy insurance on the Health Care Exchange.  He also spoke about data showing health care high costs and poor outcomes in the U.S. as compared to Countries with National Health Care.   

Sheila Kuehl, now Los Angeles County Supervisor and formerly a several time Member of the State Legislature, spoke about the history of health care, the beginnings and growth of Medicare and her Bill to establish a Commission responsible for the program for Single Payer Health Care in CA. 

Her Single Payer Bill was introduced several times, to wide support, but was not realized.  She reminded the audience that even if it had been successful it would have needed to go to the voters for approval. 

Kuehl continues to be optimistic saying that she believes incremental changes will continue until “Single Payer becomes inevitable.”

MedicareResources.org outlines the history of Medicare in the U.S from the 1912 platform of President Teddy Roosevelt, which included the idea of a national health plan.  President Franklin Roosevelt had wanted health care to be part of the Social Security Act.

§       In 1945 President Harry Truman called for the creation of a national health insurance fund to be open to all Americans.
§      President John Kennedy made an unsuccessful push for a national health care program for seniors. 
§      Finally, in 1965 President Lyndon Johnson signed legislation that started Americans receiving Medicare health coverage.  President Truman was at the ceremony and received the first Medicare card.
§      The retirement wave of baby boomers was once expected to cause Medicare to become a budget buster. The Congressional Budget Office is now projecting lower increases than once thought, thanks in part to cost savings embedded in ObamaCare.
§      MedicareResources.org records 49,435,610 people as receiving health coverage through a Medicare program in 2014.


PNHP CA focuses their action on creating Medicare for all
and works to support every effort to increase access to health
care for everyone. http://pnhpcalifornia.org/

Jackie Goldberg, former State Assembly Member, former Los Angeles City Council Member and former Los Angeles School Board Member, attended the event to show her support for PNHP and Single Payer and ably led a successful fundraising from the stage.

I believe universal health care, like universal education, will make our democracy better and stronger.  I’m grateful to PNHP and to all the people and organizations working to make quality health care for all a reality.  I am grateful to all the Presidents from Teddy Roosevelt to Barack Obama who moved the cause of universal health care forward. 

In this election year our health care is a front and center issue.  I am grateful to Bernie Sanders. We have all benefited from his commitment to health care for all and for helping our nation to focus on this issue.  

I am grateful to Hillary Clinton.  We have benefitted as a nation by her successful work to make a reality of the plan to insure millions of American children and by her long-standing commitment to achieving health care for all.

& like Sheila Kuehl, I think it’s inevitable.

What Say You?







June 17, 2016

Heal the Bay Honors Felicia Marcus with The Dorothy Green Award
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist

Felicia Marcus received the prestigious Dorothy Green Award at the Heal the Bay Awards Ceremony held on the beach in Santa Monica on June 9th.

Marcus first knew of Dorothy Green when working for then U.S.  Congressman Tony Beilenson.  Green and Marcus didn’t meet in person until they were both at a Regional Water Quality Control Board meeting in Los Angeles in 1985.  “Within 5 minutes of meeting Dorothy I had agreed to be her lawyer,” said Marcus.

Felicia Marcus

Felicia Marcus is now the Chair of the State Water Board. 
“Right now we are in water crisis but there is plenty of water to meet our real needs in California if we understand how to use it,” said Marcus.

 “Water is wondrous, precious.  We need to be grateful and respect it.  To start, we need to understand it and not take it for granted.





“Urban Californians spend half of our urban water outdoors on ornamental landscapes and lawns – trying to trick our lawns into thinking we’re really in Scotland.

“In the 80’s and 90’s we focused water saving efforts indoor use, on toilets and dishwashers and showers.  In our current drought cycle we are focusing on water use outdoors.

“More importantly we are in a decade of experimentation as we figure out what we could do differently.”

Marcus is an Angelino, born in West Hollywood, going to Birmingham High School in Van Nuys.  When she was in high school sports were still mainly for boys.  “There were special teams for smaller boys to compete, called the ‘B’ and ‘C’ teams.  “The Coaches were working to eliminate those teams so they could have more money for the Varsity teams,” said Marcus.

Marcus learned about the issue from her High School teacher and Marcus thought it was wrong.  With the support of her teachers, Marcus went to the Board of Education to express her support for the ‘B’ and ‘C’ teams.

“I won,” said Marcus, “and I got the very naïve sense that it was pretty easy to win.”

“I didn’t know about East Coast schools and I only knew about Harvard from the movie ‘Love Story’ but I applied.  When the letter came from Harvard I was at camp.  My Aunt Charlotte called and asked if she should open it.  “Yes,” I said.  She did and we both burst out laughing in a combination of relief and happiness.”

“I was a CA girl going from the newness of LA to a school where everything was old.  I loved it.  For me it was a fascinating exposure to all the ways to be and think.”

The Root Tilden Fellowship at NYU attracted Marcus to the law school at NYU.  (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root-Tilden_Scholarship)  “I was interested in issues of environmental health and public health – issues which affected everyone.  I wanted to become an environmental lawyer.”

Marcus had clerked for Judge Harry Pregerson and then, later, when working at Munger Tolles and Olson, she represented Heal the Bay on the Clean Water Act case requiring LA City to meet water quality standards for treatment plants discharging into Santa Monica Bay.

“Judge Pregerson heard the case and he made us all sit together.  It meant we got to ask our questions of the people and the agencies we saw as the polluters.  It also meant we had to listen to their answers.  There were a myriad of “aha” moments as we began to understand each others’ skills, problems and the potential solutions to protect water quality.”

Marcus has a distinguished resume as an environmental attorney:
working at the firm of Munger Tolles and Olson where she did pro bono work for both Heal the Bay and Planned Parenthood; 
working as the Director of Litigation at Public Counsel
and leveraging volunteer lawyers in public service work;
serving the City of Los Angeles as a Public Works Board Chair with a focus on water quality and recycling;
serving as the EPA Regional Administrator in San Francisco for the EPA during the Clinton Administration 
serving as the chief Operating Officer at the Trust for Public Land.  “In communities across the country TPL connects people to land by creating parks of all kinds;”
working at NRDC as the Western Director.

As Chair of the CA State Water Board Marcus talks about the seriousness of her responsibilities. “Water is part of everything.  It’s essential to life.  We can’t take water for granted. We must use water intelligently so we can meet all our needs.

“Drought has accelerated the conversation about water use.
Climate change accelerates it more.  With even a few degrees rise in temperature we get more rain than snow and that’s a disaster because our snow is about 1/3 of our water storage in a typical year.

“The only way we can approximate that storage capacity is to use our aquifer.  Even in agriculture one farmer’s flood irrigations can be another’s ground water recharge.  It’s a geologically complex issue.

“To deal with the freight train of Climate Change means there can’t be just one solution.  We have to do everything.  Conservation is first.  We also must capture storm water, recharge our aquifers, manage our ground water basins.  We have to make ourselves water resilient.

Felicia Marcus says, “I learned from Heal the Bay and from Dorothy Green that our greatest strength, our power, comes from not just caring about the ocean and the environment but honoring and caring for people.”



Contact Susan Cloke






June 14, 2016

Vigil for Orlando

Rainbow Flag Santa Monica City Hall
ORLANDO
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist


Santa Monicans gathered in front of City Hall at the end of the day on June 14th to honor and remember the victims of the Orlando shooting.  They called for gun control and for the banning of assault weapons. 

Ross Altman led people in singing ‘We Shall Overcome” and the assembled group joined in and crossed their arms, Civil Rights Movement style, to grasp the hands of the people on either side.

Welcoming remarks were made by Mayor Tony Vazquez and Council Member Ted Winterer.  Welcome also came from Janet McKeithan, the Minister at the Church in Ocean Park, President of the Interfaith Council and the organizer of the Vigil.

Representatives of Christian, Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim, and Bahia faiths spoke of the shared values of all faiths.  The message from each religious leader was one of love and compassion for all people. 

Rabbi Neil Comess Daniels said, “In my tradition we are told ‘You shall not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor.’  It is not a suggestion.  It is a mandate.”

Torie Osborne, political and community leader, spoke of being part of a world-wide community, of demonstrations in London, Paris, Los Angeles, Orlando, Tokyo.  The Eiffel Tower, she said, was lit the colors of the LGBT flag.  http://www.politico.eu/article/eiffel-tower-orlando-lights-mass-shooting-anne-hidalgo-isil-terrorism/ 

Osborne spoke of the compassion of the people of Orlando, saying, “Straight or gay, the people stood in the blistering son for over 5 hours to donate blood to the wounded victims.”

Community leader Lucy Taylor read her poetry, written for Orlando.

“We are that sister, brother, man, cousin, friend to those beautiful souls that were robbed of their life and stolen from our hearts.

“We are that survivor of your wounds and will continue to stand strong with our LGBT Community.  Together we will continue to live in freedom and love.”

The vigil concluded with the names of the Orlando victims being read out and a resonant bell sounding with the reading of each name.   

Names of the victims. City of Orlando

Theresa Bonpane and Ross Altman
The Santa Monica Vigil for Orlando was over, but the words of religious and community leader Theresa Bonpane were remembered, “We join with tens of thousands of people all over the world,” and people left City Hall knowing this was not over.  


June 10, 2016

Santa Monicans: Talking about Voting

Santa Monicans:  Talking about Voting.
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist


Voting Day is Tuesday, June 7.  Santa Monicans are talking about the upcoming California Primary Election.   Really they are talking about the issues impacting us and the world: what is the future of our health care, education, immigration, human rights, international rights, women’s rights, worker’s rights, can we put an end to terrorism, the place of the United States around the world, civil rights, safety, violence of all kinds, and who is the most qualified, in all ways, to be able to do the best job of being our president.

This column gives voice to Santa Monicans, well known for their contributions to their neighborhoods and to the City.  People supporting Clinton, Sanders and Trump have answered the question:  “Who do want to be the next president of the United States and why?  The hope is that that their answers will help forward the discussion in Santa Monica.

Sheila Kuehl
Los Angeles County Supervisor
I'm so passionate about electing Hillary Clinton.  I know her, and I know her historic Presidency will make a huge difference in the lives of women, families, working people and children. 
She is vastly experienced, compassionate, and deeply grounded in all the areas that make a difference in American lives: from the economy to the environment, from work to family.  This is a critical presidential election and we need Hillary in the Oval Office.

Jim Conn
Founding Minister of the Church in Ocean Park and former Santa Monica Council Member and Mayor
I support Bernie because this is the only time in my life I’ll ever be able to vote for a democratic socialist.  I been following Bernie since the 70’s because what he was trying do in Vermont, I was trying to do in Santa Monica.

Cristyne Lawson
Former Dean at California Institute of Arts
Hillary Clinton is the only viable candidate as far as I can see.  She’s the only person who has the insight and experience to solve the problems of our Country and to represent the US abroad.  It’s not about who you like it’s about who would be able to take on the task of the job of President of the United States. As I see it the other two candidates are the same person at opposite ends of a teeter-totter.

Bob Holbrook
Former Council Member and Mayor
I plan to vote for Hillary Clinton.  Trump’s the opposite of any politician I ever worked with.  I can’t imagine Mr. Trump as our president.  Hillary has the broadest experience.  She knows how to handle tough issues.  She has made some mistakes in her many years of political life but it’s hard to find a politician who hasn’t made mistakes.  I know I did.  I hope voters will listen to all the candidates and make their decision for the person they think will best represent America.

Polly Benson Brown
Past President of the Santa Monica Republic Women’s Federation
Speaking only for myself, I’m waiting for the Republican Convention to make my decision about the person I will support.

Jason Islas
Journalist
I support Hillary because governing is hard.  One thing that I really appreciate about her is that, although she isn’t as good as I’d like at expressing herself in political slogans, she is very good at expressing herself in the act of politics.  I respect the fact that she has been able to make decisions in the face of hard choices. The landscape of America has not been open to a woman president previously.  I hope we are ready now. She’s more than ready for the most difficult job of being the President of United States.

Douglas Brown
Engineer and owner of Brown Marine Engineers
“At first I supported Trump because he threatened to infuse a little backbone into the Republican Party.  I moved to Cruz because he seemed more government knowledgeable.  He dropped out and so now I’m supporting Trump again. Trump is the only one opposing Sanders, the admitted socialist and Hillary Clinton, the closet socialist.”

Patricia Hoffman
Co-Chair of SMRR (Santa Monicans for Renter’s Rights)
Bernie is my choice.  I think Bernie Sanders is taking bold positions about real issues that impact the lives of millions of everyday Americans. 

Gene Oppenheim
Family Physician
Bernie basically is expressing the democratic wing of the Democratic Party and the issues the Democratic Party should have been pushing for 30 years: income inequality, the working poor, Medicare for all health care.  Finally admitting and addressing a whole racial issue that has been ignored.

Paul Cummins
Educator, Founder of Crossroads and New Roads Schools
I’m voting for Hillary Clinton.  I believe it’s time for America to have a woman president.  We couldn’t find a more capable, wise and experienced person.  She’s by far the best choice of anyone running.

I say, listen to everyone, read everything.  Get your questions answered.  Make your best decision and then VOTE.

What Say You?

*Note:  So many good, knowledgeable, interesting people live in Santa Monica.  If you’d like to share your thoughts about the election please post them in the post section below this column and/or email me at susan@smmirror.com







December 18, 2015

Kesha Ram: Roosevelt Elementary Class President To Vermont Legislator


Kesha Ram
Courtesy Photo


Kesha Ram: Roosevelt Elementary Class President To Vermont Legislator
SUSAN CLOKE / MIRROR COLUMNIST
December 18, 2015


Kesha Ram, a Santa Monican by birth and a prominent student leader in Santa Monica is now a Vermont resident, a member of the Vermont Legislature, and a candidate for Lieutenant Governor in Vermont. She is working her way around the State of Vermont, meeting voters, talking to people and, in her own words, “just generally having a good time.”

It’s early days in this campaign. The election isn’t until Aug. 9, 2016. Believing that “now is the time to have conversations,” Ram was in the living room of Jill Michaels home in Strafford Vermont on Sunday, Dec. 13. That weekend she had also been to Woodstock, Vermont for the Wassail Weekend Horse Parade and Craft Market and in Bellows Falls Vermont to visit with local business people and to attend the Windham County Democratic Committee Awards Dinner.

In Michaels’ living room Ram sat with a dozen or so people, an impressive group including State Treasurer Beth Pearce, a DNC superdelegate, local business people, and individual Straffordites such as Ned Coffin, an eminent member of the Strafford community. They were there to meet the candidate and talk issues.

Called a “kitten in lipstick” in her first Vermont campaign eight years ago Ram said the comment may have been sexist and rude but it gave her the advantage of being underestimated. While others were making snide comments she was talking to people.

“I would sit in everyone’s living room and we would talk about their lives, their families, their stories and their problems,” she said. “I felt, win or lose, it was all worth it because Vermonters have great stories and are so welcoming.”

Registering hundreds of new voters in the process Ram won her seat in the Vermont State Legislature. To put this in context, the City of Burlington – where Ram was running – has a population of 42,284. The population of the entire state is 626,562.

It was Ram’s first bid for public office.  “I was graduating from the University of Vermont,” she said, “and I felt my generation needed a voice.”

Now in the 8th year of holding her part time legislative position she talks about her work: helping to achieve statewide recognition for the Abenaki people – who called Vermont home before the United States was a country; making first time home-buying more affordable; and planning a path to a clean energy future for the State.

“Vermont has over 16,000 jobs supported by renewable energy,” she said. “We are moving toward energy independence and have committed to 90 percent renewable energy by 2050. I want to make sure we stay the course.”

Ram is on the campaign trail for the position of Lieutenant Governor of the State. Ram calls the position one of “Connector-in-Chief.”  Her responsibilities would include presiding over the Senate with fairness and impartiality; traveling the State listening to people; and helping people solve problems by connecting them to other people and agencies and businesses.

Win or lose her priorities will remain making early childhood education, higher education, home ownership and high speed broadband accessible to every Vermonter.

“Vermonters can’t afford to pay a Vermont premium on their cost of living while at the same time having a Vermont discount on their wages,” said Ram. “Vermont is a special place to live and people are paying more to live here. Our small villages, our rural resiliency, our natural landscape all give Vermonters a great quality of life and we need to make that work.”

Ram said Vermont has more organic farms per capita than any other State in the Union.
“I understand the real value in sustainable farming,” she said. “My mother was president of Co-Opportunity, a health food cooperative in Santa Monica and my father was the owner of McGinty’s Irish Pub in Santa Monica. I draw on their work.

“My grandmother was a big influence in my life. The Big Blue Bus was our ticket to independence and to go interesting places together. So I understand when Vermont seniors express feelings of isolation because of lack of transportation and it is an issue I want to work on.”

She said her interest in service has been with her all her life.  “When I was in 1st grade I could already read and my teacher had me work with other students who needed help learning to read,” she said. “I gained so much from that experience. By the time I was in the 5th grade at Roosevelt I ran for and won the office of Student Body President.”

Ram’s endorsements for Lieutenant Governor include Vermont officials Former Governor Madeleine Kunin, Former Secretary of State Don Hooper, House Majority Leader Rep. Sarah Copeland-Hanzas (D-Bradford), and House Assistant Majority Leader Rep. Kate Webb (D-Shelburne).
Ram is also endorsed by more than 20 of the sitting State Representatives and a long list of community leaders, and it’s early.

Kesha Ram says, “Vermont is now my home. But my commitment to service, learned in my childhood in Santa Monica, is central to my life and I now give my service in Vermont.”

For more information on her campaign, visit kesharam.com.
RELATED:
Hometown Hero column on Kesha Ram, SUSAN CLOKE, Columnist, Santa Monica Mirror, Sept. 24, 2009:








November 20, 2015

4th/5th and Arizona A Drama in the Kabuki Theater of Santa Monica


 4th, 5th and Arizona Project Rendering
 Courtesy Photo                       

4th/5th & Arizona Project 
A Drama In The “Kabuki Theater Of Santa Monica”
SUSAN CLOKE / MIRROR COLUMNIST
November 20, 2015

The 4th/5th & Arizona project public process could be a drama in the “Kabuki Theater of Santa Monica.” A drama complete with Kabuki set roles of villagers, warlords, samurai, nobles, and servants and a plot of strategy and gamesmanship.

Unlike the world of Kabuki Japan we are a democracy. Instead of the Samurai with his sword of justice saving the day we have the tools of democracy. The democratic process, in all its fullness will, I offer, be the way to the best possible decision. The kind of decision that, like Santa Monica City Hall or Palisades Park made it possible for future generations to look back at the careful thoughtfulness of past Santa Monicans and be grateful.

Our cast of characters includes: the Council, City Manager, and City Staff; the developer and his team; the Neighborhood Groups, Residocracy – a City wide group formed to oppose the ultimately unsuccessful Hines development, the Union hotel workers, the political organization SMRR, the low income housing developers Community Corps, and the many Santa Monicans who take a keen interest in development in the City.

On Oct. 20, 2015 the City Council held a special ‘float up’ meeting to hear the project, to decide whether or not to go ahead and, if going ahead, to give direction to the developer and City staff.

The 4th/5th & Arizona project is on City owned land so the City has both regulatory and proprietary responsibilities. The developer proposes to build a 420,000 square foot building comprised of a cultural component, public open space, office space, a boutique hotel and affordable housing. The southern edge is 12 stories with a maximum height of 148 feet. The building steps down, getting lower the nearer it gets to Arizona. The building design has a series of rooftop open spaces and the ground floor has 38,000 square feet of public open space. This project is under a Development Agreement.

John Warfel, the development team leader, said he knows there is support for the design, for open space, hotel and housing in the project but opposition to the proposed height and massing. He asked for direction from the Council.

As is the script at public hearings, next up were the more than 75 speakers for almost three hours of public testimony.

Often design is the center of public opposition. This project has some people who are wary of the design, but many more who think it inspirational and whose wariness is focused on height and scale.

Support for the project as proposed at 148’ in height and 420,000 square feet of floor space came from long time Santa Monica activists who spoke about the good jobs that would be created and the affordable housing that was part of the project. Both housing and jobs were part of the original direction to the developer from the City.

Support for project as proposed came from members of the UNITE HERE Local 11, the hotel workers union. Melanie Lutheran, speaking for the Union said more than 1,000 union members live and/or work in Santa Monica and support the project at 148’. Clergy and Laity United joined in speaking to the need for good, well-paying jobs.

Opposition speakers included long time Santa Monica activists speaking against planning through Development Agreements and asking the Council to look at requiring the building to comply with the 84-foot height limit.

Armen Melkonians, speaking for Residocracy, opposed the project and called instead for a public park. Many of the neighborhood groups are joining in the call for a public park on the site.

Zina Josephs, speaking for the Friends of Sunset Park stated her organizations support for a park on the site and added, “We also believe the development agreement should be put on hold until the completion of the Downtown Specific Plan because: (1) this is resident-owned land that should be used for resident needs, (2) we want a park with parking underneath, and (3) the proposed hotel/office project is deeply flawed.”

At the close of the public hearing the Council deliberated.  Mayor Kevin McKeown called the design “brilliant” but said his concerns were height and mass. He said, “The first thing you do when there’s too big a hole is to put down the shovel.”

Councilmember Ted Winterer said the design was “place-making” but too big for the site and asked the Council to look at how to achieve balance.

Councilmember Terry O’Day said, “If this is a box we’re in it’s a box we’ve built. If what we’re struggling with is the size of the envelope then let’s tell the development team and staff that’s what we want.”

At the end of the discussion it was unanimously agreed that the Council rejected the project as presented and wanted to move forward with a smaller project to be studied in the EIR (Environmental Impact Report).

The EIR to be prepared would:
• Study a project with a 15 percent reduction in overall size of the building. A 50 percent reduction of total sq. ft. allowed for office.
• Study a smaller project alternative.
• Study a project at six stories - per the recommendation of Councilmember Sue Himmelrich.
• Study the site for a park with underground parking.
• Analyze the no project alternative.

Staff estimates EIR preparation will take 12 to 18 months and expects the Downtown Specific Plan to be completed first.

Showing the importance of this project, even though this was the only item on the agenda, the meeting was adjourned at 1:30 am.

Let’s consider the time needed to prepare the EIR as the intermission in the play. More importantly this is the time to carefully and thoughtfully use the tools of democracy to ‘write’ the next act.

A fundamental rule of democracy is that people work together to make decisions. It’s time for our cast of characters to engage in what City Manager Rick Cole calls “robust outreach.”  Not as easy a task as it might sound. But one that is necessary for a good decision to be made given the strength of divergent opinions in the City.

Armen Melkonians, the founder of Residocracy said, “The Residocracy Board feels the site would better serve the City if it were a park.

“Tongva Park,” said Melkonians, “is more a piece of art than it is a place for people to go to relax or to play. And it feels kind of dangerous – from Ocean Avenue it feels as if you’re entering a cave and can’t tell what’s there or where it’s going. We want this park to be a place to rest and relax for both downtown workers and adjacent residents. A place of grass and trees and shade and benches.
“No matter what the Council does, a park belongs there, and in the end it will be a park.”

John Warfel, leading the development team, said, “I know we have a lot of work to do with the neighborhood groups. I believe that once people understand the project at least some will see the project will be a community asset.

He cited the Zimmer Museum (www.zimmermuseum.org), the 48 units of affordable housing, the extensive public open space on the ground floor, the open space within the building structure, the commitment to extensive and on-going programming of the public space, the opportunities for good jobs, the public parking and the design.

Sho Shigematsu, the lead designer for the 4th/5th & Arizona project is a partner at OMA, the architecture firm of star architect Rem Koolhaas. Shigematsu responded to the concern that changing the scale of the project would harm the design. “Because this building's concept was driven by the programmatic need, increasing or decreasing these elements will not dilute the design. We are confident our concept will rise to the challenge of addressing the civic and commercial needs of the city.”

Francis Engler of the hotel workers union, UNITE HERE Local 11, is a supporter of the project at the 148’ height. He has expressed a deeper concern over what he sees as the racism in the dialogue, saying, “When we hear someone say that hotel workers are not residents of Santa Monica we ask, "What makes you jump to the conclusion that hotel workers are not residents of Santa Monica? The fact they are Latino? The fact they speak Spanish? The fact they are wearing the uniform of a housekeeper? Which prejudice tells you they don't belong? We have never, ever heard an opponent of this project ask a white person if they are a resident of the City. They only ask this question of Latino hotel workers.”

SMRR (Santa Monicans for Renters’ Rights) Co-Chair Patricia Hoffman said, “SMRR has not yet taken an official position on the project. But many members think it’s too big, that it’s massive and many members love it and think it’s exciting and good for the city.  “It’s normal for us to have differing opinions and disagreements but I expect SMRR will take an official position when the EIR comes forward for review. Then we will actually know something.”

I say I agree with Cole when he says, “the greatest safeguard for long term economic security is not the upfront payoffs but how the new building will contribute to a vibrant and sustainable future for the city.”

I say I agree with the person who, at the public hearing, said, “Good wages should not be a bargaining chip. Good wages should be required of all developments.”

I say I agree the proposed project is too big, out of scale, for the site and don’t, can’t know yet, if the reductions directed by the Council are sufficient.

I say, at the right scale, this is a brilliant piece of architecture for Santa Monica. The design concept of the carpenter’s rule opens in a way that creates many opportunities for being outdoors in a city whose character is defined by the outdoor life. The programming being offered is key to the building’s success as a public building.

I say downtown needs a good park. This site will be considered in the EIR and others downtown sites should be considered as well.

Most of all, I say that this time, the time before the EIR is ready for its first public scoping meeting, is the time for an open and thoughtful dialogue. It can only lead to a better decision.

What Say You?





September 4, 2015

Tony Gleaton: A Tribute

Tony Gleaton: A Tribute  
Photograph Portrait by Tony Gleaton
Photo permission Lisa Gleaton
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist


Tony Gleaton: Artist. American Patriot. Beloved Friend.
August 4, 1948 - August 14, 2015

A brilliant thinker, Tony Gleaton created a singular life pursuing the visual expression of what it means to be human.  He held a profound respect for each and every person.  This respect informed his art, his photographs, his life’s work.

Gleaton’s belief in the principles and values of the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution were strong.  He was a patriot.  He enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 18, during the Vietnam War. 

Gleaton was a serious man with an irreverent sense of humor.  This gift of humor gave him an extraordinary skill as he navigated the contradictions in his own life.  He was an artist with a profound commitment to his work.  He had lived through turbulent times in the U.S.  He was a very tall and very large, light-skinned, green-eyed African-American man.  Prejudice and discrimination were part and parcel of his daily life.

Respect for the humanity of each person, intelligence and an irreverent sense of humor gave Gleaton entrée just about anywhere he wanted to go.  His work took him to the mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico, to the northern-most coast of South America and to the American West.

Gleaton’s photo lecture, “Race as a Social Construct” was born out of this work.  In that lecture he proposed not just an end to racism but also that we think of race so differently that our consciousness of race is changed.  The lecture was presented to large audiences at UCLA and other universities in the U.S.

“Race,” Gleaton said, “is a social construction.  It is not a bio-empirical fact.  Ideas and racial definitions come out of the historical, sociological and psychological need to quantify and categorize.

“My thoughts regarding the question of racial construction are at best conditional.  They are shaped out of my own personal history.

“Unknowingly, and in some cases knowingly, conversations about race, its meaning, social significance and definition often take place within the confines of a particular historical, social and psychological memory, which is formed both collectively and individually …. 

TENGO CASI 500 ANOS.  By Tony Gleaton http://www.tonygleaton.com/TonyGleaton.com/Writing_By.html

Much as he sounds, and was, the professor – having taught at Texas Tech University in Lubbock Texas and at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, he was, first and always, an artist.

In the 1970’s Gleaton decided to leave UCLA, where he was studying art and history and go to NYC to make his way in the studios of fashion photography.

Coming to LA for a short break from the NYC winter Gleaton talked about his disgust with fashion photography, which he likened to the betrayal of young girls.  Out of that disgust grew the idea that he would, at whatever cost, make his own way and that his photographs would be how he communicated with the world. That decision shaped his work and the rest of his life. 

Gleaton went on the round up and cattle drive with cowboys in the American West.  His photographs of the cowboys at work redefine the myth of the American cowboy and the participation and contributions of African-American, Latino and Native American cowboys.

Gleaton travelled by bus and bicycle to Oaxaca, Mexico. He lived in the villages and became known in the local communities.  Gleaton’s photographs are stunning for their art and for his essential point – his respect for the people.

Gleaton followed on land the sea route of the old slave ships along the northern edge of South America.  He photographed the people now living along that route.  On that photo journey he learned that people who may have been the descendents of slaves defined themselves, not by race, but by their country, their indigenous ancestry or their name origin. http://www.tonygleaton.com/TonyGleaton.com/TC5A_So._Am..html

Gleaton’s last work focused on landscapes, on places important in the history of the United States.  Places where people lived and sometimes fought and died.  The people are no more but he honors their memory is his landscape photographs. http://www.tonygleaton.com/TonyGleaton.com/Home_page_files/SaltPond_Tony_010_699.jpg


“I believe that the value of these photographs lie not in the fact that they provide answers.  Their value is in, by viewing them, they provide us a place in which we choose to ask questions,” Gleaton said of his work.

The choice to be an artist could be seen as a hard choice.  Gleaton’s lifestyle itinerant, money scarce, loving and loved and married and divorced three times because of his commitment to his way of making art.  For Gleaton it wasn’t a choice.  The only life he wanted was the life of an artist.

At long last, there was Lisa Ellerbee, a High School Teacher and Principal in San Mateo, California.  They married in 2005 and they came to terms with his commitment to his work and his long absences.  Lisa Ellerbee Gleaton was with him when he died on August 14, 2015 at the Veterans Hospital in Palo Alto, California.  Gleaton was buried with full military honors at the National Cemetery in Dixon, California on August 26, 2015.

Gleaton navigated his life with an unrelenting dedication to his work, a sense of humor that was the delight of his friends, a generous heart, and a kind spirit.  He was beloved by many people, among them my children, now adults, and me.  He made the world a kinder and more thoughtful place.  It was a blessing to have known him.  He is missed.

Contact Susan Cloke
susancloke@gmail.com

New York Times Obituary