Jobs & Economy Resolution Approved and Issued

The following resolution was approved at the February 27, 2018, membership meeting:

“A Pro-Employment & Pro-Environment Industrial Policy

WHEREAS, Republican strategies on jobs and economy aiming at tax cuts, trade agreement changes, and reduced regulations will fail to create the claimed number of jobs, although they claim to be the party of jobs, business and economic development.

WHEREAS, the Democratic Party needs to strengthen its rhetoric in this area by proposing a bold and courageous plan of its own, so that it can regain advantage by claiming to be THE party that knows better how to create sustainable and manufacturing jobs.

WHEREAS, in the last election, the Democratic Party lost many working class voters that had traditionally voted for the Democratic Party, and we face the need to win these voters back, besides motivating new and young voters to vote with us on candidates and issues

BE IT RESOLVED, that we propose a four-point strategy on jobs and economy that will pose a strong counter point to the proposals so far trotted out by the Republican Party, namely

  1. Encourage pro-employment tax reform that will allow depreciation of Human Capital like training and other forms of education.
  2. Encourage a pro-employment re-industrialization policy that systematically creates new industries and businesses that favor greater employment per unit of finance, supporting the process all the way from R&D to production, and from financing to marketing.
  3. To help depressed communities, favor local production for local use, that would encourage R&D and the development of industries that develop capital equipment for the processing of agricultural, forestry and fishery products – food and non-food, from a wide variety of local sources.
  4. Favor the Transforming of All Activities – Making them Sustainable, Pro-Environment & Climate Friendly: By transforming activities leading to Sustainable Energy, eco-Cities and Townships, Sustainable Industry (using clean energy and recycling all products), sustainable Transportation (low carbon, low noise and low pollution), sustainable Agriculture, Forestry & Fisheries

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that we recommend the Democratic Party adopt this as a Resolution at higher levels of the Party and that all candidates, local, state or national, be encouraged to adopt such jobs and economy rhetoric as part of their election campaigns to counteract the strategies on this front by the Republicans, and in their subsequent work if elected.”

Contact: Hari Lamba, member El Cerrito Democratic Club, hlamba101@gmail.com

March Meeting Preview

The March club meeting will be held on March 27, 2018 at the Presbyterian Church at 545 Ashbury Ave, El Cerrito 94530.

Meeting begins at 6:30 PM. Arrive at 6 PM to enjoy Pizza for $5/ slice.

At our March meeting we will vote on the following:

  • Minutes of February 27, 2018 Meeting
  • Treasurer’s Report
  • Ratification of President Janet Abelson’s appointment of Hari Lamba as VP of Publications

Meeting Business

Anti-SB 1 Effort & Parks Bond Measure (Prop. 68)

Guest speakers at the March 27th Membership meeting will discuss two issues of importance that could be impacted by upcoming elections: (1) Proposition 68 – the Parks, Environment, and Water Bond on the June primary election ballot, and (2) efforts to overturn in November SB 1– the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017 which was recently passed to provide critical transportation funding in the state.

  • Proposition 68: Representatives of the East Bay Regional Parks, Erick Pfuehler, Government Affairs Manager, and Lis Baldinger, Legislative Assistant, will discuss benefits of the proposition up for a vote in June which was pushed legislatively by Sen. Kevin De Leon.  A “yes” vote would authorize $4 billion in general obligation bonds for state and local parks, environmental protection projects, water infrastructure projects, and flood protection projects.
  • El Cerrito BART issues/SB 1 Repeal efforts: El Cerrito’s BART Director Rebecca Saltzman will provide a brief update on issues which impacting BART riders and the El Cerrito BART stations. She will also provide information on efforts to place a proposition on the November ballot to repeal recently passed SB 1 (Beall) which raised the gas tax and will provide funding for a variety of road, transportation and transit programs and projects in the state.

County Candidates and Measures for ECDC Endorsement:

The El Cerrito Democratic Club will seek endorsement by its members of the following candidates and measures at the meeting on March 27, 2018.

The candidates included here are (1) Democrats running for positions in Contra Costa County and (2) the State Superintendent of Public Instruction — a non-partisan post where a majority vote on the June primary election will elect that candidate without a General Election campaign.

More information on Contra Costa County elections can be obtained at: http://www.cocovote.us/wp-content/uploads/2018_CandidateGuide.pdf

ECDC will also consider endorsement of the Regional Measure (RM3) to be voted on by all the nine Bay Area Counties in June to help solve the Bay Area’s growing congestion problems.  The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) worked with the state Legislature to authorize this ballot measure that would finance a comprehensive list of highway and transit improvements through an increase of bridge tolls on the region’s seven state-owned toll bridges.  Senate Bill 595 (authored by Sen. Jim Beall of San Jose) was passed by the Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Brown in fall 2017.  If approved by a majority of voters in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano and Sonoma counties, toll revenues would be used to finance a $4.45 billion slate of highway and transit improvements in the toll bridge corridors and their approach routes.

For endorsement consideration

State:

  1. State Superintendent of Public Instruction
    1. Tony Thurmond
    2. Marshall Tuck
    3. No Endorsement

Contra Costa County:

  1. Contra Costa District Attorney
    1. Diana Becton
    2. No Endorsement
  2. Contra Costa County Superintendent of Schools
    1. Lynn Mackey
    2. No Endorsement
  3. Contra Costa County Assessor
    1. Gus Kramer
    2. Geoffrey William Steele
    3. No Endorsement
  4. Contra Costa County Auditor–Controller
    1. Ayore Riaunda
    2. No Endorsement

Regional:

  1. Regional Measure 3
    1. Support
    2. Oppose
    3. No Endorsement

Executive Board Meeting Report – March 5, 2018

Meeting Started at 7pm

Pre Meeting Discussion (Hari, Greg not present)

  1. Vacant Publications Position
    1. President Janet Abelson appointed Hari Lamba to Vice President of Publications
    2. Hari Lamba can begin working on the newsletter and other duties
    3. Scott Lyons will assist Hari in the transition
    4. Background on Hari: Democratic Engineer that works on environmental issues on free time and has extensive experience with working for various non-profit organizations.
  2. Web Consultant Question

Quorum reached at 7:25 pm

  1. Call to order & Roll Call
    1. Members Present: Quorum present consisting of President Janet Abelson President, Executive Vice President Mister Phillips, Membership Vice President Champagne Brown, Treasurer Greg Lyman, and Records Vice President Rosa Esquivel, and Acting Vice President Hari Lamba.
    2. Members Not Present: Programs Vice President Paul Fadelli.
    3. Visitors: Past Presidents Scott Lyons and Peter Chau (joins at 7:36 pm via phone and later in person)
  2. El Cerrito City Council Conflict Discussion
    1. Greg will refrain from participating in program discussion in order to avoid conflict of interest.
    2. Potential council conflict areas can include: Prop 13 and/or Charter City.
    3. Programs will be moved to end of meeting so that Greg can leave and not be present during discussion.
    4. Loving Day discussion will only be on logistics so there is no conflict.
  3. Minutes of last executive board meeting were approved
    1. Mister Phillips and Scott abstained
  4. Treasurer’s Report
    1. Fourth of July booth applied
    2. Paid bill for Harding Elementary School event on 2/27/18
    3. Four new memberships
    4. Around $11,000 balance in account
    5. There have been no payments from the ECDC club to Jeff in the past
    6. Rent is paid on a monthly basis for regular club meeting location
  5. Web Consultant
    1. Jeff Koertzen, is excited to help us and Greg will reach out to Jeff as the Web Manager, Jeff will post items to website
    2. We prefer to hire Jeff as a consultant, it will depend on his status
    3. Greg will negotiate contract with Jeff
    4. Greg will share contract scope with board
    5. Working on negotiating a $2,000 contract with Jeff
    6. If there is no LLC, then we issue a 1099 as an employee
    7. Action: Greg will negotiate contract and determine IRS status
  6. Election of open positions
    1. Champagne pointed out that bylaws say that majority of voting club members can elect any member at any of the next meetings
    2. Another section of Presidential duties includes assigning and appointing members to any vacant positions
  7. Membership Report
    1. Champagne wants a database
    2. Champagne recommends Wild Apricot for tracking membership, website events and other activities, customer size 1000+, $70 month, free trial; However, Champagne is willing to see if Jeff can do something better
    3. Only issue with only online membership is that membership still likes personal membership and some still like to write checks
    4. We are still using Mail Chimp,
    5. Jeff needs current membership list, and expired membership list.
    6. We just need to be able to generate active membership list for each meeting so that we can check membership
    7. $40 per month for Wild Apricot software exceeds budget
    8. We have around 100 paid members right now and expecting 200 by August because of the endorsements
    9. Club membership fluctuates between 100-300 depending on elections
    10. Motion to ask club to approve bigger budget for membership software – on hold till next meeting – Cost is based on percentage of membership
    11. Champagne will continue to do research and work with Mail Chimp, Wild Apricot seems to be too expensive for the club
  8. Newsletter
    1. Scott might still be the website administrator
    2. Board voted on Newsletter items
    3. Next Deadline is March 12 (to Hari – Hari requested items by March 10th)
      1. Greg will alert Paul to get program items to Hari by March 10th
    4. Hari needs to print and mail items by March 17th to meet next deadline
    5. Paul has provided Program information for the next newsletter.
    6. Hari has received Paul’s content from candidate profiles?
    7. 15 members still want newsletter mailed to their house.
    8. Item 1: Preview upcoming Meeting: Janet and Paul will provide content information to Hari
    9. Item 2: E-board report: report back to club on board item discussions (from Rosa)
    10. Item 3: review of previous club meeting (see Rosa’s Notes)
    11. Item 4: club member submissions (i.e. Hari’s article, Resolution on the same, Peter Chau’s submission).
    12. Hari will send newsletter to Scott, who will figure out how to get it into the club website
  9. Website
    1. We should maintain historical link of previous club resolutions
  10. ECDC Platform
    1. ECDC platform activity is an off year activity
    2. Mister Phillips is part of platform activities; he advises working on these in 2019 to prepare for the next election
  11. The ECDC IRS status discussion
    1. We are a 501(C)4 organization as per IRS rules. We are a political organization. As a club should we have an EIN?
    2. We have to exceed $25,000 a year in funding before we have to register
    3. We do not have employees, and the answer was no to all IRS questions, as to whether we need an EIN
    4. We are a nonprofit, and we might need to get an EIN?
    5. 990EZ annual filing for IRS
    6. Action Item: Greg to find out if we need EIN and what an Employee is.
  12. Awards Storage
    1. Rosa is keeper of all club historical items
    2. She keeps for a year and donates to historical society
    3. She has to keep awards in a safe place for the club
    4. Dinner plates and club items
  13. Events
    1. El Cerrito High Cafeteria, we have not yet booked it, but Mister Phillips should request it for Saturday August 25th from 9am to 4pm for the endorsement forum –
      1. Confirm that our meeting has been calendared in the central database
    2. Paul is working on speaker forums for County offices for June timeframe.
    3. Next meeting in March, we will hear from county superintendents
    4. Loving Day – do we want a booth at the event?
      1. We need volunteers to be at the booth
      2. Event is around a Saturday around June 12th
  • Volunteer article to get volunteers
  1. County offices forum will be the 6th or 8th of March (we are invited to come to the West County Dems club)
  2. September Meeting
    1. Mister Phillips has to contact Superintendent
  3. We might need a walk campaign for June
  4. Greg to do volunteer article for all activities (walk, Loving Day, Fourth of July), respond to Janet Abelson
  1. Web Consultant
    1. Mister will work with Greg on Jeff’s contract
  2. Next General Meeting is 3/27 any other items?
    1. Hari’s Position
    2. Volunteers
  3. Next Board meeting is 4/2

Greg Lyman leaves meeting as planned as of 9:10pm.

  1. Program Discussion
    1. Affordable Housing
      1. David Chu’s proposal for zone change around BART stations
    2. October 20th looks good for October dinner.
    3. We still need a better venue; St. Jerome’s or St. John’s social hall are accessible, if not Kensington

Meeting Adjourned at 9:22 pm.