Say what you will about the Civil Sidewalks people, but, no matter, you can’t say that they are afraid to enter the Fortress of Reaction, the Belly of the Beast. ‘Cause they’re going to Bring It to the Upper Haight this Saturday morning.
You know, everybody will be there, starting with Mayor Gavin Newsom and SFPD Chief George Gascon, starting at 10:00 AM
Get all the deets from the BOMA, below.
Haight Street on any given Saturday:
Ashbury Street on free Ben & Jerry’s day:
The deets:
UPDATE: Civil Sidewalks | Campaign Kick-Off Rally on October 9, 2010
UPDATE – As of October 4, 2010
BOMA San Francisco Members:
Join Mayor Gavin Newsom and Chief of Police George Gascon at a Civil Sidewalks campaign kick-off rally on Haight Street this Saturday at 10:00 a.m. The Mayor will be there to meet you and thank you for your support and commitment to restoring civility to our sidewalks. Please join us and be sure to bring your family and friends!
Civil Sidewalks Campaign Kick-Off Rally with
Mayor Gavin Newsom
Chief of Police George Gascón
October 9th @ 10:00 am
FTC, 1632 Haight Street
This is a family-friendly event – there will be fun activities planned for all attending children!
This rally will send a strong message that San Franciscans are serious about creating safe, civil sidewalks for residents and businesses across the City.
Please take a moment to watch the video above ( click here to view the video on YouTube if you can’t see it) of community leaders in support of the Yes on Proposition L, for Civil Sidewalks, and No on Proposition M effort.
———————
The time has come to rally around the most important issue facing San Francisco’s neighborhoods and commercial corridors; Yes on Proposition L, for Civil Sidewalks, and No on Proposition M, the “poison pill.” ‘
Who wants Civil Sidewalks?
U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein
Mayor Gavin Newsom
Chief of Police George Gascon
Supervisor Michela Alioto-Pier
Supervisor Sean Elsbernd
Supervisor Carmen Chu
900 + small businesses
1,000 + SF residents
& over 25 merchant and neighborhood associations
Proposition L will ensure public sidewalks are accessible for everyone, and that all San Franciscans can enjoy the public right-of-way without fear of harassment. This is a commonsense law that is being used with success in 60 other U.S. cities including Berkeley, Santa Cruz, and Seattle.
Proposition M is a political ploy by the Board of Supervisors intended to kill Measure L with a “poison pill.” Prop M neither changes deployment of foot patrols nor resources; this Measure puts politics ahead of your public safety.
If Yes on Prop L/No on Prop M is not successful in November, it is highly unlikely that we will have the opportunity to address this problem for decades. This is why we need YOUR help. Do you have two hours to give between now and Election Day?
PLEASE, take a moment and imagine how tremendously our city would benefit from passage of this law, and if two hours of your time is worth seeing that change through.
Tags: 2010, 24th, ashbury, bay area, beauty, brownies hardware, california, Captain, carmen chu, chickens, chief, chief of administration, citizen's arrest, civil sidewalks, civility, coalition for san francisco neighborhoods, council, department, dept., district 4, district merchants, erick arguello, foot patrols, freedom, ftc, gavin newsom, George Gascón, giant robot, haight, haight ashbury improvement association, herb cohn, judy berkowitz, karen growney, kent uyehara, kickoff, luke martinez, Manager, Mayor, megan schnider, mercahnts, Michela Alioto Pier, mom, mother, neighborhoods, no, owner, paul henderson, poison pill, police, prop, Proposition, pure, pure beauty, resident, safety crime, San Francisco, SFPD, sit lie, stephen, store, street, Supervisor, ted lowenberg, Teri Barrett, upper, yes on l
“Innocent until proven guilty” is the only proper foundation of a justice system in a free society.
We must treat people as individuals, not criminalize entire groups for the bad actions of a few.
This measure flies in the face of the individual freedom that America is supposed to stand for.
Watch out — it could be your cherished freedom on the chopping block next.
No sit/ lie was ruled unconstitutional in Oregon.
http://blogtown.portlandmercury.com/BlogtownPDX/archives/2009/02/19/judge_rules_sit_lie_law_uncons