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Events News NewsFlash

Notes from January Meeting – Regeneration and Renewal

Monday, Jan 18, 2021 Via Zoom

6:30PM Club President Susan Peinado called meeting to order

Welcome

Honoring Dr Martin Luther King, Jr

Dr Akilah Weber

Opening remarks by La Mesa City Council Member, and clubmember Dr. Akilah Weber.

We all know that Martin Luther King Jr. is very well known for his leadership during the Civil Rights Movement. When it started in 1955 and he led it until his assassination in 1968. We’re all familiar with his very famous I Have a Dream speech that was given in 1963 during the March on Washington. Many of us have read his letter from Birmingham Jail. Or maybe familiar with the march from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery, which became known as Bloody Sunday as they initially tried to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge. We are taught about his role in the Montgomery boycott, and yes, thankfully, every year we celebrate his birth and his legacy in January. We respect, appreciate, admire, and I’m grateful for everything that he did, and all that he gave, including his life, his efforts to eliminate racial and economic inequality.

I thought it was interesting his daughter Bernice King tweeted something very powerful this morning. She said please don’t act like everyone loved my father. He was assassinated. A 1967 poll reflected that he was one of the most hated men in America. Most Hated. Many who quote him now, and evoke him to deter justice today would likely hate, and may already hate the authentic King. And when you listen to her words you realize that she is absolutely correct. There was one person to credit for keeping his legacy alive, for telling his story for making sure that generations to come, would understand what he stood for, and the sacrifice that he made. And that is due to his wife, Coretta Scott King.

After his assassination she took over the movement for civil rights and broadened it to include other issues, such as women’s rights, LGBT rights and world peace. In 1968 she called for women to unite and form a solid block of women power to fight the three evils = racism, poverty, and more. She fought hard to make MLK Day a national holiday and continued that fight until she was successful in 1986. It is often said that besides every great man, you will find an even greater woman. They may not always get the credit. But when you look at every major movement. women are often at the core of making impactful change worldwide. Coretta Scott King said “Women, if the soul of the nation is to be saved, I believe you must become its soul.”

When we examine the current issues that we’re facing today. Recognize that they’re not new. We have faced them many, many, many times before. We can learn a lot from Coretta Scott King. She stated “Struggle is a never ending process. Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every generation”. We must remember, and teach our younger generations. The power of focus. The power of hard work. Not to get discouraged because right, and justice will ultimately prevail.

In conclusion I want to use one more quote from credit Scott King, she said “It doesn’t matter how strong your opinions are. If you don’t use your power for positive change, you are indeed part of the problem.” Members, we all have very, very strong opinions. And during these various tenuous times I challenge each of us to keep the words of Coretta Scott King and use our voice for positive change.

Thank you for letting me open this night on this momentous occasion.

Dr Akilah Weber

Approval of Agenda (M: Dr. LaWana Richmond)

Introductions

Club Officers – President Susan Peinado, VP Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller, VP Ramla Sahid (not present), Secretary Cathie Hyatt and Treasurer Rosamond Blevins

Recognition of visiting Electeds or their representatives, representatives from other affiliated organizations

  • Doug Case Representing State Senate President Pro Tem – Toni Atkins – state budget update
  • San Diego County Board Supervisor VP, Nora Vargas – Vaccine Super Station update, Q&A

I just have to say it is so wonderful to hear a member of the board of supervisors talk about evidence based health care and social determinants of health and thinking about vaccines. So, thank you for being on the board. It is just so good to hear this conversation,

Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller
  • Gloria Cruz representing Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer 

Recognition of Club President Susan Peinado

Rosamond Blevins, presentation of flowers

Treasurer’s Report

Rosamond Blevins

Rosamond Blevins with details of balance on account, and contributions of $7,782 k made to other organizations during 2020, including to Stacey Abrams’ Fair Fight, San Diego Food Drive and Holiday Toy Drive.

Nominating Report

Rosamond thanked the other committee members Dr Samm Hurst and Cheryl Robertson.

  • Dr. LaWana Richmond is running for Club President.
  • Cathie Hyatt is running for Secretary
  • Rosamond Blevins is running for Treasurer

Elections

Dr LaWana Richmond

Dr. LaWana Richmond elected President of the Democratic Woman’s Club by acclamation (M: Lori Saldaña)!

Over the past 20 years, LaWana has been actively involved in community service and social justice endeavors. She is one of the inaugural Chrispeels Fellowship recipients and earned a doctorate in Educational Leadership from California State University, San Marcos and University of California, San Diego.  Her research interests include leadership development and employee engagement as well as access to and persistence in education.

LaWana is a member of the Advisory Board for the C. Montgomery Technology Fund, which supports community access to technology at the Malcolm X Library in southeast San Diego. She has served on the Executive Board of the African American Alumni Chapter of the San Diego State University Alumni Association, Executive Board of the UJIMA Network, Advisory Board of N.U.M.E.R.A.L.S. (formerly known as the Hadassah Project), Area 17 Governor for Western Division, District 5 of Toastmasters International, Chair of UC San Diego Black Staff Association, Chair-Elect and Chair of the UC San Diego Staff Association, as well as Junior and Senior Delegate for the Council of University of California Staff Associations.

Cathie Hyatt

Secretary Cathie Hyatt reelected by acclamation (M: Rosemond Blevins)

Rosamond Blevins

Treasurer Rosamond Blevins reelected by acclamation (M: Yvonne Elkin)


Covid Rant from UCSD Epidemiologist Vice President Dr. Becca Fielding Miller – Not that Kind of Doctor 

COVID updates and vaccinne info. The county is lowering the requirement age to 65 the week of Jan 24. Sign up here. If you need help signing up, let the club know and we’ll do our best to help you sign up.

I just want to talk a little bit about how to talk with people who are vaccine hesitant. Because there is a crowd of people who are pretty intense about their feelings and want to throw menstrual blood on the floor of the legislature and those are.. that’s a certain set of people. But there’s a lot of folks who are well meaning who aren’t you know going to storm the Capitol but have some, some legitimate concerns right, maybe they don’t trust the guy who was in charge of our government when operation Warp Speed went into effect. Maybe they are just a little bit concerned about how quickly it rolled out or maybe they have any, or maybe they belong to a group of people who have been treated pretty poorly by the medical system. And so I just want to remind you when you’re talking to people about vaccines, the best thing you can do is remember that you’re not trying to win a tennis game you’re not trying to score points. The best way to have a conversation is to just have genuine empathy, and to spend honestly more of your time listening than talking. So if somebody says, you know I’ll get the vaccine but I don’t want to be first in line, you can say, I totally get that that’s a really reasonable concern. You know, like a couple million people have already gotten it by now but you know what worries you maybe we can talk about it, because most people really really really big squishy middle of people who are not anti vaccine. They just need somebody to stop and listen and have a conversation with them. So, I will remind you as vaccine conversations start to ramp up that nobody ever actually changed their mind because you told them they were stupid, that’s not really a great way to change people’s minds. The best way to talk to people about vaccines, is to remember this is somebody that you like and trust and have a relationship with, and you’re really lucky that they’re willing to voice these concerns and that you have an opportunity to listen, to respond to what they’re actually saying with empathy and to share some of your experiences and your thoughts. And if you ever have questions about vaccines or anything like that. you are so welcome to to reach out, in particular on Twitter, or over email and I’ll answer any questions that you have, or point you to resources. If I don’t know the answers. I also promised to say I don’t know if I don’t know, which is also a best practice.

Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller

Bylaws Revisions

Yvonne Elkin

Chaired by Yvonne Elkin.

Yvonne thanked other bylaws committee members: Rosamond Blevins, Ruth Rollins, Nicole Crosby, and Jenn French. She also thanked Susan and John.

There followed a great discussion and various improvements were considered and a consensus arrived at to include these into the Bylaws to be voted on at the February meeting. Details to be sent out at least 14 days before the next meeting.

Article II Section 1 – Change promoting to developing an activist base (M: Lori Saldaña)

Article III Section 1 – Move “Individuals who are ineligible to vote…” to section 2 (M: Kate Bishop) If individuals are registered to another party not Republican

Michelle Krug: friendly amend to other than 

M: Rob Howard amend to NPP – no second. Original language retained. 

Article III Section 4 – Change one meeting to four meetings (M: Samantha Jenkins)

Kate Bishop: friendly amend to three meetings. Seconded

M: Michelle Krug to strike thirty-four days. Seconded

Article IV Section 1 – Add language to make it clear that elected officials are eligible to be officers (M: LaWana Richmond)

Article IV Section 1 – Officer must resign from eboard 6 months before consideration of endorsement OR upon filing for the position, if within that 6 month period. (M: Sarah Davis)

Article IV Section 1 – Motion to change language in Secretary description. M: Kate Bishop, no second, motion dies

Nominating Committee elected by the body rather than President (M: Kate Bishop)

Article IV Section 3 designate October meeting of odd years to elect club associates (M: Kate Bishop)


ADEM Candidates

Candidates still in attendance at the end of the meeting!:

  • Kenya Taylor AD71
  • Kate Bishop AD80

Announcements

Remember to mail your ADEM ballot. Since the meeting:

Wednesday, February 3 – All ADEMs ballots RECEIVED by Wednesday, February 3 WILL BE COUNTED. This is a 1-week extension beyond the previous “postmarked by January 27 and arrive by January 30” deadline.

Playout music, Sam Cooke “A Change is Going to Come”


Video of the meeting is on our YouTube channel here.

Notes by Cathie Hyatt, Secretary

Categories
Events News

Notes from August Monthly Meeting – Census, Board of Supervisors, COVID


Zoom Meeting. Monday, August 17 available on our YouTube channel.

Meeting was called to order at 6:30PM by Susan Peinado, President.

Agenda approved (M: Samm Hurst)


Program

Isabel Lemus
Alexandra Meza

US Census representatives, Alexandra Meza and Isabel Lemus presented urgent and comprehensive information on Census 2020.

Why Is the U.S. Census So Important? (PRB)

  • Apportionment
  • Redistricting
  • Money to States and Localities
  • Planning
  • Emergency Response
  • A Base for Federal Surveys

Each undercount will deny San Diego $2k per person, per year for 10 years.

Watch the presentation here.


Kenya Taylor

Kenya Taylor, Board of Supervisors 101, everything you ever wanted to know about the County Board of Supervisors.

San Diego County Budget Portal


Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller

Club Vice President Dr. Rebecca Fielding Miller

  • COVID-19 update and discussion of the importance of poop testing in schools
  • Q & A

Endorsement & Resolution

Samm Hurst
Yvonne Elkin

Endorsement consideration of Samm Hurst, Santee City Council, District 4. Members spoke in favor and voted to endorse.

Ellen Nash, BAPACSD, request for DWC support of Proposition 16. Members voted to support.

Yvonne Elkin Chair Endorsement Committee, update on this cycle’s endorsements and recognition of the Endorsement Committee.

Results of August 16 Endorsement meeting.


Announcements

  • Shane Parmely – Hotels for Homeless Kids Now. Tell Councilmember Chris Ward and the County Supervisors our kids should be sleeping between sheets, not on the streets.

From the Chat


Candidates


Meeting adjourned 8:35PM

Dance Party – Keb’Mo and Roseanne Cash- Put a Woman in Charge

Next regular meeting – Monday, September 21, 2020


Notes by Cathie Hyatt, Secretary

Categories
Events News

Aug 17 – Monthly Meeting – Census, Board of Supervisors, COVID

Meeting virtually by Zoom.

When: Monday, August 17: Meeting starts at 6:30 PM but please start checking in at 6:00 PM, to help us get the meeting started on time.

Where: Zoom registration is required – if you’re a clubmember or participant click here to register ahead of time. All of the details on how to join will be provided – including dial-in details from a landline.

Our meetings are available live on our  YouTube channel. Someone will monitor the chat to text into the meeting relevant questions or comments that may be asked there. 


Featured Speakers

Isabel Lemus
Alexandra Meza

Two representatives from the US Census, Isabel Lemus and Alexandra Meza will be joining us to talk about the US Census. Some of the items to be discussed include:

  • Confidentiality of the Census, Fact or Fiction?
  • The Census questionnaire, explaining why certain questions are asked
  • Indicate how you can identify enumerators to avoid scams
  • Provide you with the San Diego Census Office Helpline and website for the 2020 Census

As most of you know, the Census has been shortened this year. Covid-19 has had a very negative impact on getting everyone counted. Here is a link which will help you understand the importance of the US Census.

As women, many of us trusted within our communities to provide valuable information about voting and government resources, we are in a unique position to be able to be an informal Census 211, getting those difficult and uncounted people included, with the information Ms. Lemus and Ms. Meza will provide.

Kenya Taylor

Former candidate for County Board of Supervisors District 2, Kenya Taylor, will talk to us about the importance of the Board of Supervisors. Ms Taylor, an expert in health and human services is uniquely qualified to explain what is so important about the Board of Supervisors.

Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller

Club Vice President Dr. Rebecca Fielding Miller, UCSD Assistant Adjunct Professor, Medicine, School of Health Sciences, an epidemiologist, who has been featured on NBC San Diego and Voice of San Diego, will address member concerns and questions on Covid related issues. More information on Dr Miller may be found here.


Endorsement consideration of club member Samm Hurst, Santee City Council District 4

Samm’s legacy also lays claim to a beloved paternal great grandmother – Sadie Dotson Hurst – a Republican who in 1918 ran and won in the Nevada Assembly of Washoe County as the first female legislator in Nevada history. On January 23, 1919, Mrs. Dotson Hurst authored and introduced the resolution amending the Constitution of the United States and granting the right of suffrage to women. The resolution was adopted. Truly a pioneer in politics, Sadie passed away at the age of 94 before her great granddaughter was born.

Samantha ‘Samm’ Hurst is the 3rd generation to reside in East County. As a child she played in her grandparents’ citrus orchards in Crest, and Samm lived with her family in northeast El Cajon in a house built by her father. Samm attended Bostonia Elementary School and Greenfield Junior High, and in her early teens the family moved to La Mesa where she graduated from Helix High School.

Dedicated to public service, Samm is a member of the Santee Historical Society and the Santee Collaborative. She also attended the FBI Citizen’s Academy and remains active in the Academy Alumni activities with teen ambassadors.  Samm additionally served on the San Diego Human Relations Commission and the committee chair for the committee on Human Sex Trafficking and Child Sexual Exploitation.

Samm attended San Diego State University where she received her BA in Exercise Physiology and MA in General Anthropology before receiving her PhD in Socio-Cultural and Biological Anthropology at the University of Tennessee. After getting her Ph.D., Samm returned to San Diego and dedicated her life to community health to make San Diego County neighborhoods safer and healthier. She has spent the last two decades teaching and researching at UCSD, including projects working to improve the lives of U.S. combat veterans.

While she answers to Dr. Hurst at work, at home in her neighborhood, it’s just Samm.

Samm lives in the Weston neighborhood of Santee’s District 4 with her two shetland sheep dogs, Bibby and Striker.

Samm is running for City Council to apply her background to help better the quality of life in Santee. She is fighting to reduce traffic, support small business, preserve open space, and ensure that development projects are in line with the community’s vision.

https://www.samm4citycouncil.org/


Endorsement Update

Endorsement Committee Chair Yvonne Elkin will update us on the results of our August 16 Endorsement meeting.

  • Chula Vista Elementary School Board Area 4
  • National City City Council
  • Oceanside Mayor
  • Oceanside City Council District 3
  • Oceanside City Council District 4
  • Vallecitos Water Board Division 5

Categories
Events News

Notes from July Meeting – Listening to Powerful Women

““Do not get lost in a sea of despair. Be hopeful, be optimistic. Our struggle is not the struggle of a day, a week, a month, or a year, it is the struggle of a lifetime. Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble.”

John Lewis, 1940-2020


Zoom Meeting. Monday, July 20 available on our  YouTube channel.

Meeting was called to order at 6:30PM by Susan Peinado, President.

Agenda approved (M: Esther Sanchez)

  • Welcome and thank you
  • Reading of letter to Senator Atkins and Assemblymember Dr. Weber regarding Federal use of force against peaceful protesters. Motion to support (Shari Mackin) tabled to allow time to credential members.

Program

Senator Toni Atkins

Doug Case introduced Club Member Senate President pro Tempore, Senator Toni G. Atkins

  • COVID 19, legislation, and budget updates
  • Q & A



Dr Shirley Weber

Club Member California State Assemblymember Dr. Shirley N. Weber.

  • ACA5
  • Additional updates
  • Ellen Nash presents Federal force letter and requests her support.
  • Q & A
  • The passing of John Lewis

Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller

Club Vice President Dr. Rebecca Fielding Miller

  • COVID 19 update & rant
  • Q & A

Endorsement Update

Endorsement Committee Chair Yvonne Elkin updated the club on our next Endorsement meeting Sunday, August 16, 11AM to 2PM.  These meetings will be limited to members only. ONLY members who can vote will be mailed ballots and links to the meeting.

We will attempt to endorse in the following races:
Chula Vista Elementary School Board Area 4

  • Kate Bishop
  • Laurie Humphrey

Oceanside Mayor

  • Rob Howard
  • Ruben Major
  • Esther Sanchez

Oceanside City Council District 3

  • Bill Batchelor
  • Amber Newman
  • Shari Mackin

Oceanside City Council District 4

  • Michelle Gomez
  • Jane Marshall

National City City Council

  • Marcus Bush
  • Jerry Cano
  • Gonzalo Quintero
  • Jose Rodriguez
  • Ditas Yamane

Vallecitos Water Board Division 5

  • Tiffany Boyd-Hodgson
  • Matt Corrales

Ellen Nash and Alyce Pipkin-Allen

Commissioner Ellen Nash
CDP E-Board Member AD79 Alyce Pipkin-Allen
  • Update on Resolution to Demand San Diego Democrats Refuse Donations from Law Enforcement Unions, seeking DWC-SD support
  • Unanimously endorsed by San Diego County Democratic Party
  • Candidates are in the process of donating the money they received from law enforcement to local organizations

Consideration of letter to Senator Atkins and Assemblymember Dr. Weber regarding Federal use of force against peaceful protesters

Motion to suspend noticing requirement as permited in the bylaws to allow vote on supporting the letter (Yvonne Elkin) passes.

Motion to support letter (Shari Mackin) passes.


Rosamond Blevins gave the Treasurer’s Report on bank balance and recap of donations.


Candidates

  • Shari Mackin, candidate for Oceanside City Council District 3
  • Samm Hurst, candidate for Santee City Council District 4
  • Sarah Davis, candidate for State Assembly District 78
  • Tiffany Boyd-Hodgson, candidate for Vallecitos Water Board District 5
  • Jack Shu, candidate for La Mesa City Council
  • Esther Sanchez, candidate for Mayor of Oceanside
  • Tim Nader, candidate for Superior Court Judge
  • Dr. LaWana Richmond, candidate for SD Unified School Board District E
  • Rob Howard, candidate for Mayor of Oceanside
  • Nadia Kean-Ayub representing Tiffany Gonzalez, candidate for Sweetwater Planning Board
  • Kate Bishop, candidate for Chula Vista Elementary School Board
  • Joe LaCava, candidate for San Diego City Council District 1 (had to leave before announcements at the end of the meeting)

Announcements

  • Michelle Krugg – Propositions 15, 16, 17, and 18
  • Shane Parmely – Resolution to remedy the discrimination of unsheltered during COVID
  • Kate Bishop – SD Progressive Democratic Club South Chapter Progressives Special Panel: Trans+ Allyship and Activism, July 27 at 6PM
  • Oceanside Mayor filing deadline extended to August 12

From the Chat

Meeting adjourned 8:48PM

Dance Party – Keb’Mo and Roseanne Cash- Put a Woman in Charge

Next meeting – Endorsement Meeting, Sunday, August 16, 2020

Next regular meeting – Monday, August 17, 2020


Notes by Cathie Hyatt, Secretary

Categories
Events News

July 20 – Monthly Meeting – Listening to Powerful Women

“If you’re not hopeful and optimistic, then you just give up. You have to take the long hard look and just believe that if you’re consistent, you will succeed.”

Although we have lost John Lewis in body, we have not lost his wisdom.

It’s important to keep that long hard look as we head into the November election, to stay hopeful and optimistic, that we will succeed in wresting our country and ourselves from destruction. It’s too important this time to sit back and watch politics. It’s not entertainment – not a sports team where you pick sides. We need all hands on deck. Pick something that you can do and be consistent.

And while we are doing that, let’s continue to find ways, as John Lewis admonished us, to get in the way, “…to get in trouble… good trouble, necessary trouble.”


Meeting virtually by Zoom.

When: Monday, July 20: Meeting starts at 6:30 PM but please start checking in at 6:00 PM, to help us get the meeting started on time.

Where: Zoom registration is required – if you’re a clubmember or participant click here to register ahead of time. All of the details on how to join will be provided – including dial-in details from a landline.

Our meetings are available live on our  YouTube channel. Someone will monitor the chat to text into the meeting relevant questions or comments that may be asked there. 


Featured Speakers

Senator Toni Atkins

Speaking to us Monday night will be Club Member Senator Toni G. Atkins, from Senate District 39, the 51st and current President pro Tempore of the California State Senate, updating us on important information about state level Covid-19 efforts.

Toni G. Atkins was born and raised in southwestern Virginia, the daughter of a miner and a seamstress, and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in political science from Emory & Henry College in Emory, VA. In 1985, she moved across the country to San Diego, California.

Atkins served as an aide to San Diego City Councilmember and LGBT trailblazer Christine Kehoe, and, in 2000, was elected to replace Kehoe as the council’s District 3 representative.

Elected by voters to the state Assembly in 2010, Atkins served there for six years. In 2014, her colleagues selected her to be the Speaker of the Assembly – she became the first San Diegan and the first lesbian to hold the position. In 2016, Atkins was elected to represent the 39th District in the state Senate. In January 2018, after just one year in the Senate, she was elected by her colleagues to be the next Senate President pro Tempore. In March 2018, she was sworn in, becoming the first woman and the first openly LGBTQ person to lead the Legislature’s upper house.

Throughout her career, Atkins has been a champion for affordable housing, the natural environment, healthcare, veterans, women, and the LGBTQ community. She lives in the South Park community of San Diego with her spouse, Jennifer, and their dog, Joey.

  • SB 902 – Allows local governments to voluntarily pass a zoning ordinance that is not subject to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) for projects that allow up to 10 units, if they are located in a transit-rich area, jobs-rich area, or an urban infill site.
  • SB 995 – Expands the application of streamlining the CEQA process to smaller housing projects that include at least 15 percent affordable housing. It also would broaden application and utilization of the Master Environmental Impact Report (MEIR) process, which allows cities to do upfront planning that streamlines housing approvals on an individual project level.
  • SB 1085 – Enhances existing Density Bonus Law by increasing the number of incentives provided to developers in exchange for providing more affordable housing units. 
  • SB 1120 – Encourages small-scale neighborhood development by streamlining the process for a homeowner to create a duplex or subdivide an existing lot in all residential areas. Such applications would be required to meet a list of qualifications that ensure protection of local zoning and design standards, historic districts, environmental quality, and existing tenants vulnerable to displacement.
  • SB 1385 – Unlocks existing land zoned for office and retail use and allows housing to become an eligible use on those sites. It also would extend the state’s streamlined ministerial housing approval process to office and retail sites that have been vacant or underutilized for at least three years.
Dr Shirley Weber

Also speaking is Club Member California State Assemblymember Dr. Shirley N. Weber, elected from the 79th Assembly District, which includes the cities of Bonita, Chula Vista, La Mesa, Lemon Grove, National City and San Diego. She will discuss her Assembly Constitutional Amendment, ACA5, to let voters decide in November whether to reinstate affirmative action. Lawmakers approved a proposal Wednesday asking them to repeal the 25-year-old law that bans the consideration of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin in university admissions, public employment and contracting.

Born to sharecroppers of Hope, Arkansas, Shirley Weber has lived in California since the age of 3. She attended UCLA, where she received her BA, MA and PhD by the age of 26. Prior to receiving her doctorate, she became a professor at San Diego State University (SDSU) at the age of 23. Dr. Weber also taught at California State University at Los Angeles and Los Angeles City College before coming to San Diego State University.

Dr. Weber chairs the Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Public Safety. She also serves as a member of the Assembly Standing Committees on Education, Higher Education, Elections, Budget, and Banking and Finance.

Prior to being elected to the Assembly, she served as the mayor’s appointee and Chair on the Citizens’ Equal Opportunity Commission. Dr. Weber has also served on the Board of the NAACP, YWCA, YMCA Scholarship Committee, Battered Women Services, United Way, San Diego Consortium and Private Industry Council, and many more.

Assembly Member Weber has lived in the 79th Assembly District for over 30 years. Her children attended public school in the district and she was elected to the school board. As a board member, and subsequent board president, she became known for her advocacy for closing the achievement gap and a higher standard of excellence for all children.

Here is the list of Dr. Weber’s successful legislation from 2019-2020:
AB 392: Restricts the conditions under which law enforcement can use deadly force.

AB 498: Expands the veteran business license fee waiver to include veterans who provide services

AB 612: Addresses student hunger by increasing access to the CalFresh Restaurant Meals Program on community college campuses.

AB 701: Provides financial housing assistance to exonerated individuals upon release from prison.

AB 703: Waives tuition and certain fees for any exoneree who attends any California Community College, California State University and the University of California.

AB 942: Expands access to hot and prepared food choices for people who are homeless, disabled or elderly through a statewide expansion of the CalFresh Restaurant Meals Program.

AB 1240: Requires data from school districts to determine whether preparing a K-12 student for both college and career technical education gives them a better chance of success.

AB 1538: Clarifies that all consumers have the right to choose cash payment in lieu of repairing a damaged vehicle under an automobile insurance policy.

Dr Rebecca Fielding-Miller

Club Vice President Dr. Rebecca Fielding Miller, UCSD Assistant Adjunct Professor, Medicine, School of Health Sciences, an epidemiologist, who has been featured on NBC San Diego and Voice of San Diego, will address member concerns and questions on Covid related issues. More information on Dr Miller may be found here.


Endorsement Update

Endorsement Committee Chair Yvonne Elkin will update us on our next Endorsement meeting Sunday, August 16, 11AM to 2PM.  These meetings will be limited to members only. ONLY members who can vote will be mailed ballots and links to the meeting.

We will attempt to endorse in the following races:
Chula Vista Elementary School Board Area 4

  • Kate Bishop
  • Laurie Humphrey

Oceanside Mayor

  • Rob Howard
  • Ruben Major
  • Esther Sanchez

Oceanside City Council District 3

  • Bill Batchelor
  • Amber Newman
  • Shari Mackin

Oceanside City Council District 4

  • Michelle Gomez
  • Jane Marshall

National City City Council

  • Marcus Bush
  • Jerry Cano
  • Gonzalo Quintero
  • Jose Rodriguez
  • Ditas Yamane

Vallecitos Water Board Division 5

  • Tiffany Boyd-Hodgson
  • Matt Corrales

As always, if any member has questions or concerns, please feel free to call. We look forward to ‘seeing you’ on Monday July 20.

Susan Peinado, President
(619) 225-9236
president@dwc-sd.org

Categories
Events News

June 15 – Monthly Meeting – Politics in the time of COVID

As we settle into this pandemic, the days melt into weeks, and the weeks drag on to months. Many of us are depressed, frustrated, lonely for family, missing all the freedoms of the “Before Times”, scared for our future and the future of our loved ones, worried about paying bills and rent.

And mad that our country hasn’t done better for Black Americans. This month has been one of tremendous pain as we watched a cruel Minneapolis policeman, Derek Chauvin, callously kill the Black man we now know was George Floyd. And the events that unfolded after that have been unceasingly difficult to bear witness to. The tear gassing, beatings and unwarranted brutality toward peaceful protesters, for some of us looting in our community, shooting rubber bullets at reporters and protesters– all this seems too much for even the worst horror movie.

And yet it is real. It’s our reality in this Time of Covid. Hopefully, the communities and relationships we have built will help us process this and change into better versions of ourselves.

Please join us on Monday night. We will leave some time for breakout rooms where we can check in with old friends and help each other process what is happening as our national horror.


Meeting virtually by Zoom.

When: Monday, June 15: Meeting starts at 6:30 PM but please start checking in at 6:00 PM, to help us get the meeting started on time.

Where: Zoom registration is required – if you’re a clubmember or participant click here to register ahead of time. All of the details on how to join will be provided – including dial-in details from a landline.

Our meetings are available live on our  YouTube channel. Someone will monitor the chat to text into the meeting relevant questions or comments that may be asked there. 


Featured Speakers

San Diego County Party Chair, William Rodriquez-Kennedy, joins us to talk about what went happened at the controversial vote that increased the SDCDP Budget and how we can help empower progressive Democratic Council Members to address police overuse of force and building a more equitable city. As well as how the Party is planning to campaign in the age of COVID19.

Chula Vista former Mayor and current Councilmember Steve Padilla will speak to us regarding his recent experience with COVID-19, the realities of governing during this uncertain time, and talk about the importance of continued voter education efforts even though elections look different now than they have in the past.

Club Vice President Dr. Rebecca Fielding Miller, UCSD Assistant Adjunct Professor, Medicine, School of Health Sciences, an epidemiologist, who has been featured on NBC San Diego and Voice of San Diego, will address member concerns and questions on Covid related issues. More information on Dr Miller may be found here.


Resolution to Demand San Diego Democrats Refuse Donations from Law Enforcement Unions

Club Members Ellen Nash, Chair of the Black American Political Association of California (BAPAC), San Diego Chapter and Alyce Pipkin-Allen, recipient of the San Diego County Democratic Party Chair’s Award, (and both DWC Endorsement Committee members) will bring their resolution before the San Diego County Democratic Party Central Committee Tuesday, June 16. They will be asking for our support before this important vote.

They will be asking for our support before this important vote.

Demand that the San Diego Democrats Refuse Donations from Law Enforcement Unions

WHEREAS, law enforcement in San Diego has a history of racial profiling, discrimination, and violence against Black, Latinx, API, Native American and other communities; and racially biased, militarized policing has been used as a tool to promulgate white supremacy and harm Black members of our community for over 175 years;

WHEREAS, San Diego citizens have struggled for decades to ensure that San Diego law enforcement departments and officers are held accountable to all communities they serve by advocating for reasonable measures such as the community-led Independent Commission on Police Practices to promote responsible, accountable policing and address disparities in policing practices of stops, arrests and use of force;

WHEREAS, the main obstacles to such accountability have been local police unions and the San Diego County Deputy Sheriffs’ Association;

BE IT RESOLVED that the San Diego County Democratic Party shall refuse all donations from Law Enforcement Unions and Associations and demands that all San Diego Democratic elected officials refuse such contributions as well;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the San Diego County Democratic Party requests that any candidate who has taken money from Law Enforcement Unions and Associations this election cycle contribute said money to community organizations that work on issues such as racial justice, criminal justice reform, or the empowerment of the Black community, indigenous community and other communities of color.


Endorsement Update

Endorsement Committee Chair Yvonne Elkin will update us on our Endorsement schedule and discuss the voting process. We decided to hold our endorsement meetings separately from our regular meetings. These meetings will be limited to members only. The first meeting is scheduled for Sunday, June 28, 10 AM to 1 PM and at this meeting we will attempt to endorse in the following races:

  • Assembly District 75, Kate Schwartz
  • County Board of Education 1, Gregg Robinson
  • County Board of Education 2, Guadalupe Gonzalez *
  • San Diego City Attorney, Cory Briggs & Mara Elliott
  • San Diego Unified District A, Sabrina Bazzo
  • San Diego Unified District D, Richard Barrera *
  • San Diego Unified District E, Lawana Richmond & Sharon Whitehurst-Payne
  • Superior Court Judge Seat 30, Tim Nader

Support DWC Members for ACLU Positions

Two Clubmembers are up for election at the upcoming ACLU Annual Membership Meeting and Board Election, Wednesday, June 17, 2020, 3PM to 4PM. Since many of our members are also ACLU members, we ask that you support Wedad Schlotte, nominated for Board of Directors and Yvonne Elkin, nominee for Nominating Committee.


As always, if any member has questions or concerns, please feel free to call. We look forward to ‘seeing you’ on Monday June 15.

Susan Peinado, President
(619) 225-9236
president@dwc-sd.org