Dear friends of spot.us, Christopher D. Cook and Race Poverty and the Environment magazine.
We’d like to invite you to the release of the latest issue of Race, Poverty & the Environmentwhich includes a fine piece of journalism by award-winning writer Christopher D. Cook “A Tale of Two Census Tracts.” This issue of RP&E is focused on the theme “Everyone has the Right to….” In it, we take a look at the kind of organizing needed to win social and economic rights for all.
As the current recession deepens, fundamental rights to housing, employment, healthcare, and safety continue to retract. As usual, low-income people and communities of color bear the brunt of the economic crisis.
“A Tale of Two Zip Codes: Recession Worsens Rights Gap between Rich and Poor” was jointly produced by RP&E and Spot.us, an open source project for “community-funded reporting.”
Come on by enjoy free food, beer and wine, political talk, music and pick up a free copy of the Oscar Grant Memorial Arts Project free poster. Feel free to forward.

Posted by Spot. Us on 05/23/09 Our reporter Chris Cook has recently written an article for the Christian Science Monitor on issues of SF poverty. Although this piece is not "a tale of two census tracts" it is very much a preview of coming attractions that touches on issues of poverty here in San Francisco.
By Chris Cook
Famously liberal in its politics and its spending, San Francisco is steering a new spendthrift path amid the federal Keynesian revival cutting antipoverty and social-service programs that helped build the city's reputation as a haven for the poor.
As homeless tent cities rise up in nearby Sacramento and across the country, deep spending cuts here have ignited a debate over the city's reputation and priorities, and raise a larger question: How will cities care for the widening ranks of poor and homeless in a recession that may get worse before it gets better?
To close a projected $438 million shortfall, Mayor Gavin Newsom – who is campaigning for the 2010 governor's race – has proposed a "target" of 25 percent cuts to all city departments, including large reductions to health and human service programs that, combined with deep midyear spending cuts, mean the closure of some popular antipoverty programs this July 1.
While such belt-tightening is hardly unique to San Francisco, the cuts have many asking if this iconic "Left Coast" city has moved to the right of the federal government, which is spending nearly $1 trillion to revive the economy. San Francisco's reputation for benevolence was affirmed by a recent city controller's report, which found that the city far outstrips its California counterparts in per capita spending on public health and social services.
The cuts run counter to "what this city ought to be – a caring city, caring for the people who live in this city and caring for people who serve this city," said Damita Davis-Howard, president of the Service Employees International Union's municipal workers local, at a recent City Hall protest of about 700 city workers. "People are losing their houses, people are losing their savings, their retirement, and it's the services in San Francisco that help those people in crisis."
In one of the poorest districts of the city, the Tenderloin neighborhood, a drop-in center for Latinos is slated to be cut completely, and another flagship aid program, Tenderloin Health, is set to close its doors July 1, after serving as the area's primary health resource center since 1990.
Barbara Lopez, a community organizer with the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, which will also see deep cuts, is among those who see a contradiction between the federal stimulus and local policies.
"The stimulus is about protecting the safety net and stabilizing communities, so why does our mayor feel the need to cut these services?" asks Ms. Lopez. "The city leadership has moved to the right of national leadership." San Francisco, she says, "has this reputation as a very liberal city, and socially it is liberal, but I think our dirty secret is that we're really economically conservative."
More broadly, liberal leaders say conservatives here are using the recession to move social policy to the right.
You can read more at the Christian Science Monitor
Posted by Spot. Us on 04/10/09