Wednesday, June 18, 2025
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California companies wrote their own gig worker law. Now no one is enforcing it

Los conductores de viajes compartidos del Sindicato de Trabajadores de Obras Públicas de California se manifiestan frente a la Corte Suprema de California para protestar contra la Propuesta 22 en San Francisco el 21 de mayo de 2024. La Corte Suprema del estado confirmó posteriormente la constitucionalidad de la medida. --Ride-share drivers of the California Gig Workers Union hold a rally outside of the Supreme Court of California to protest Prop. 22 in San Francisco on May 21, 2024. The state Supreme Court later upheld the constitutionality of the measure. Photo by Juliana Yamada for CalMatters.

by Levi Sumagaysay

Prop. 22 promised improved pay and benefits for California gig workers. But when companies fail to deliver, the state isn’t doing much to help push back

Nearly four years after California voters approved better wages and health benefits for ride-hailing drivers and delivery workers, no one is actually ensuring they are provided, according to state agencies, interviews with workers and a review of wage claims filed with the state.

Voters mandated the benefits in November 2020 when they approved Proposition 22. The ballot initiative was backed by gig-work companies that wanted to keep their workers classified as independent contractors and were resisting a 2019 state law that would have considered them employees. Prop. 22 stipulated that gig workers would remain independent contractors but be treated better.

The state Industrial Relations Department, which handles wage claims, now tells CalMatters it does not have jurisdiction to resolve those related to Prop. 22, citing a July 25 California Supreme Court ruling that upheld the law and therefore maintains that gig workers are not employees. That effectively passes enforcement responsibility on to the state attorney general, whose office was noncommittal when asked about its plans, saying that it does not adjudicate individual claims but does prosecute companies that systematically violate the law.

The lack of enforcement leaves in limbo workers who in many cases have already been waiting for months or years for the state to resolve their complaints. Workers have filed 54 claims related to Prop. 22 since it went into effect in December 2020. At least 32 of them are unresolved, state records obtained by CalMatters show, although at least two of those are due to workers not following through.

Of the unresolved claims, one goes back to 2021, several are from 2022 and 2023, and about half are from this year, through May.

Emails included with the claims show that the Industrial Relations Department told one worker it was severely understaffed, and seven others, starting in 2022, that it did not have jurisdiction to help them since they were independent contractors rather than employees.

Although the number of claims filed with the state represent just a fraction of the more than 1 million gig workers in California, they give a glimpse into what happens when workers turn to the state for help instead of the companies that backed Prop. 22.

Workers say in the claims, and in interviews with CalMatters, that companies such as Uber, Lyft and Instacart failed to provide higher wages and health care stipends under the law, and that the companies’ representatives sometimes act confused or take a long time to handle their requests for Prop. 22 benefits. The gig companies have touted the law as something that has boosted pay and benefits, and have said it has helped gig workers hang on to work they can do whenever they want.

Laura Robinson is among the workers who have had to aggressively pursue what they believe they’re owed under the law. For the past year, she has filed claims with the state and fought two different gig-work companies for different benefits promised under Prop. 22.

She was making a delivery for Instacart a year ago, she said, when a driver making a U-turn hit her, totaling her car. Now, she said, she has lingering back pain, and has only been able to make a total of a few deliveries over the past several months.

Robinson, who lives in Irvine, tried to get Instacart to retroactively provide her with occupational accident insurance as required under Prop. 22.

When she first contacted Instacart about the collision, “four or five different (representatives) told me on chat ‘we don’t provide insurance,’ but I told them this is California,” Robinson said. “Finally someone said ‘oh yeah, I know what you’re talking about.’ ” Robinson had some difficulties documenting the accident, because, she said, the responding Torrance Police Department officer rode away on his motorcycle without writing a report. But after about seven months, she finally heard back from Zurich, Instacart’s insurance provider. She received a lump sum, and monthly payments for the time that she has been largely unable to work, according to bank statements and emails from Zurich to her, which she shared with CalMatters.

Instacart spokesperson Charlotte Healow said all the company’s shopper support agents should know about “shopper injury protection” and that there is information in the app about how to go about filing claims. But Robinson showed CalMatters several screenshots of her chats with support agents who either thought she was asking about health insurance or who told her someone would email her back about her situation — which eventually happened, though it took a few tries.

Robinson said she had also struggled to get a smaller gig platform, food delivery app Curri, to comply with the law. Under Prop. 22, ride-hailing and delivery gig companies are supposed to pay her 120 percent of minimum wage for the time she spends driving, making up for any shortfall in the pay she receives, but Curri had not done so, she said. Not knowing where to turn, she asked a few different state agencies for help, including the attorney general’s office. She even lodged a complaint with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s National Consumer Complaint Database. After several months, the Industrial Relations Department scheduled a hearing for her case for Aug. 29. Last week, the department told her the company decided to settle and pay her what it owed, according to emails and a release she signed that she shared with CalMatters. Curri’s marketing director referred CalMatters to the company’s legal department, which did not return three emailed requests for comment.

Robinson saw the upside of Prop. 22 after it passed. She liked being able to continue setting her own hours and saw a bump in her earnings delivering for Grubhub due to the law. But she is now frustrated about how tough it was to figure out who’s supposed to be upholding it.

“It’s not helpful if it’s not enforced or applied,” she said.

Robinson said the deputy labor commissioner she was in touch with throughout the process of pursuing her claim against Curri told her last week that because Prop. 22 was upheld by the state Supreme Court — effectively ensuring gig workers cannot be considered employees — the department would no longer be handling similar cases because it does not have jurisdiction over independent contractors.

What gig workers are complaining about

The Prop. 22-related wage claims reviewed by CalMatters were part of a larger set of nearly 200 claims that gig workers filed with the Industrial Relations Department since the law took effect in December 2020. Citing the California Public Records Act, CalMatters sought all wage claims in that timeframe involving gig companies, but the state did not provide any claims against DoorDash, which is one of the biggest of the app-based gig companies. A department spokesperson could not explain why.

Most of the claimants sought delayed or unpaid wages, including adjustments owed under Prop. 22. Others sought health care stipends required under the gig-work law, and one driver said he sought occupational accident insurance but did not receive it.

The claims also shed light on the mechanics of how app companies are allegedly withholding wages. In them, some gig workers claimed that they were deactivated — kicked off or fired by the app — before receiving all their wages.

The records also indicate the state had trouble holding app companies to account in a timely fashion. In emails about the claims, some workers frequently asked for updates about their cases and complained about limited communications from the state. This prompted one supervisor in the Industrial Relations Department’s San Francisco office to respond by email on May 30, 2024, seemingly noting that gig workers’ complaints were just a fraction of the array of worker complaints the state fields: “I am working with 40 percent staff shortage. There are over 3,000 cases, most of which are older than yours, and only seven people (total) to handle them.” The department did not respond to requests for comment on whether this shortfall persists.

Monetary wage claims ranged from about $2 to nearly $420,000. Most — 54 percent —  were against ride-hailing and delivery giant Uber and 25 percent were against its rides competitor Lyft. There were 17 claims against grocery-delivery app maker Instacart, seven against food-delivery platform Grubhub, four against Target-owned delivery service Shipt and three against UPS-owned delivery service Roadie.

The Industrial Relations Department has long tried to resolve gig workers’ wage disputes. The labor commissioner, who heads the department’s Labor Standards Enforcement Division, still has pending wage-theft lawsuits against Uber and Lyft that it filed in 2020 on behalf of about 5,000 workers with wage claims going back to 2017.

Those cases predate Prop. 22, originating during a period when gig workers were misclassified and should have been considered employees under California law, the labor commissioner argues in the wage-theft suits. After Prop. 22 passed, opponents challenged it and the case ended up before the California Supreme Court, which upheld the law in July, effectively affirming that drivers are independent contractors, not employees. A department spokesperson, Peter Melton, said the ruling means the department can no longer handle claims about missing wage adjustments under the earnings guarantee, unpaid health care stipends or other aspects of the law.

Department representatives made similar statements to workers even before Prop. 22 was upheld, the claims records show. An email response, dated March 26, 2024, from the department to an Uber driver stated: “The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement enforces employment law. We cannot enforce Prop 22 earnings because they aren’t ‘wages’ earned by ‘employees’.”

This echoes the position lawyers for Uber and Lyft took in some of the records when responding to wage claims. They asked the state to dismiss such claims, writing in one email: “As of December 16, 2020, drivers using Lyft’s platform are considered independent contractors by statute and, thus, cannot seek relief under the Labor Code.”

Now that the department has disavowed responsibility for Prop. 22 claims, the question remains: Who will enforce the law?

Scott Kronland, the attorney for Service Employees International Union California who unsuccessfully argued before the state Supreme Court that it should throw out Prop. 22, told CalMatters: “I’ve also heard from drivers that they’re not getting the things they’re promised by Prop. 22.”

Kronland said their recourse, after the ruling, is to press local prosecutors or the attorney general, who have the ability to hold companies liable for unlawful business practices under the state’s Unfair Competition Law. Still, he said “enforcement is something the Legislature could clarify.”

In an unsigned email response to CalMatters’ questions after the state Supreme Court decision, including whether it planned to pursue Prop.-22-related cases against gig-work companies, the attorney general’s office said gig workers can submit complaints at oag.ca.gov/report. The email added: “Although the Attorney General does not represent individual workers or adjudicate individual complaints by holding administrative hearings like (the Department of Industrial Relations), DOJ brings lawsuits to hold accountable companies that systematically break the law, for example through widespread violations of wage and hour standards. Reports or complaints of employer misconduct are an important part of our work.”

When CalMatters previously asked the attorney general’s office for copies of any wage complaints it had received from gig workers thus far, a spokesperson responded that the office was representing the state in its effort to defend Prop. 22 before the California Supreme Court — and referred CalMatters back to the Industrial Relations Department.

What gig companies share about Prop. 22’s impact

Gig companies have said that, due in part to the initiative’s earnings guarantee, workers now make more than $30 an hour. But a May study by the UC Berkeley Labor Center found that, for California ride-hailing drivers, average earnings after expenses, not including tips, is about $7.12 an hour, and for delivery workers, $5.93. With tips, drivers’ average hourly earnings are $9.09 an hour, and $13.62 for delivery workers, the study found.

To better understand the impact of Prop. 22, CalMatters asked each of the four largest gig companies — Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and Instacart — the following:

  • How much they have spent on delivering on each of Prop. 22’s four main promises:
    • 120 percent of minimum wage earnings guarantee
    • Health care stipends
    • Occupational accident insurance
    • Accidental death insurance
  • How many gig workers have received each of the promised benefits.
  • Whether they have passed on costs to consumers, and if so, where they account for those customer fees in their public financial filings.
  • How they handle complaints or issues related to their promises.

Lyft said 85 percent of California Lyft drivers who have driven for the company since Prop. 22 went into effect have received at least one wage “top up” — the additional money drivers receive under the earnings guarantee — through the end of the fourth quarter of 2023, though spokesperson Shadawn Reddick-Smith would not provide specific numbers of Lyft drivers in the state. None of the other companies would give any information on their delivery of the wage guarantee.

Instacart spokesperson Healow said the company has paid out about $40 million in health care subsidies to its delivery workers, which she said number in the tens of thousands in the state. She also said about 11 percent of California shoppers have become eligible for a health care stipend since Prop. 22 took effect, and that 28 percent of those eligible shoppers have redeemed their subsidy.

To qualify for the health care stipends, workers must work at least 15 hours a week each quarter, and be enrolled in health insurance that is not provided by an employer or the government. Because the gig companies won’t share how many workers have received the stipends, CalMatters asked the state health insurance exchange, Covered California, if it had data that might help shed some light. Seven percent of the 1.6 million people who used Covered California reported doing gig work in a 2023 survey, said a spokesperson for the exchange, Jagdip Dhillon.

DoorDash spokesperson Parker Dorrough said that just 11 percent of eligible couriers used the health care stipend in the fourth quarter of 2023 but that 80 percent of DoorDash’s delivery workers had health care coverage through another source, such as their full-time job or spouse.

None of the other companies would give any information on their delivery of the stipend. Lyft’s Reddick-Smith said 80 percent of California Lyft drivers already have health care coverage, including 13 percent who bought their own coverage (this second group is the set of drivers who qualified for the stipend).

None of the four companies provided the numbers of workers who have used occupational accident or accidental death insurance.

None of the companies would disclose how they account for the fees they charge customers for Prop. 22 expenses, nor are the fees included in their publicly available financial filings. Instacart said it does not charge customers for expenses associated with Prop. 22. Lyft said its per-ride service fee includes a 75-cent “California Driver Benefits Fee.” Uber charges customers a “CA Driver Benefits” fee for each ride and delivery in the state and spokesperson Zahid Arab said the company has “invested more than we collected in fees.”

Uber published a blog post after CalMatters’ questions, saying it has “invested” more than $1 billion in Prop. 22 benefits. Arab would not break down these benefits further.

As for complaints related to the promises, each of the companies said workers should contact support agents, whom they can usually get in touch with in the app; an Instacart spokesperson said workers can make some claims directly in the company’s app.

Seeing little from Prop. 22

Ride-hailing driver Sergio Avedian last year helped raise public awareness of the lack of Prop. 22 enforcement. Specifically, he homed in on one narrow issue: Under the law, gig-work companies were supposed to adjust for inflation each year the reimbursement they pay to drivers for mileage. Avedian said no such adjustment had taken place for two consecutive years. And as a podcaster and contributor to  the Rideshare Guy, a popular gig-work blog, he had a high profile. Avedian and a fellow eagle-eyed driver started pestering the state’s treasurer’s office, which had not published the adjusted rates as stipulated under Prop 22. The office eventually did so and, the Los Angeles Times reported, put the state’s gig workers on track to get back pay for the mileage expenses — pay potentially worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Now, a year later, Avedian is curious about gig-company math again. He has asked Uber some of the same questions CalMatters did — including how the company accounts for the driver-benefits fee it adds on to each ride or delivery. The company’s response to him was similar — it provided few specifics.

Besides his concern about the issue as a driver, Avedian said “as a consumer who is paying into the Prop. 22 fund on every trip or delivery, I would like to know the accounting of where my money is going.”

“We’re not completely independent contractors. We’re not employees. We’re sort of a hybrid model of theirs. We’re pretty much nobody.”

Yasha Timenovich, ride-hailing driver

When the gig companies were campaigning for Prop. 22, they implored voters to “help create a better path forward for drivers.”

But Avedian and other gig workers in California say their paths have not changed much. Many still complain about low wages, little transparency from the companies and lack of worker protections.

Yasha Timenovich said he has worked as a ride-hailing driver for a decade, first with Uber, now with Lyft.

“I work 12, 13, 14 hours a day,” said Timenovich, who drives in the Los Angeles area. “But the time I sit and wait at LAX is not accounted for.” He said he has to work long hours to try to make sure he has enough earnings. “We’re not completely independent contractors. We’re not employees. We’re sort of a hybrid model of theirs. We’re pretty much nobody.”

He also said he must obtain health insurance through Medi-Cal, California’s health care coverage for low-income residents — which in turn means he doesn’t qualify for the health care stipend. He said every driver he knows “is on Medi-Cal because they can’t afford health insurance. I don’t know anyone who has (the stipend).”

Many drivers voted for Prop. 22, he said. But “what we were told was a lie.”

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INVITATION TO BID FOR THE TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT (ITB 24/25-01)

INVITATION TO BID FOR THE TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT (ITB 24/25-01)

The San Francisco County Transportation Authority (Transportation Authority) will receive sealed construction bids for the TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT. The Bid Submission Deadline is Tuesday, October 1, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. (PDT). An electronic bidding process has been adopted for this solicitation. Paper bids will not be accepted. Electronic bids shall be submitted through https://www.bidexpress.com. All bidders must register on https://www.bidexpress.com and create Digital ID through Bid Express to submit a bid. It can take up to five (5) business days to process your Digital ID and it is highly recommended that a Digital ID be active 48 hours in advance of submitting an electronic bid. Costs associated with obtaining said Digital ID and submitting a bid using Bid Express shall be the sole responsibility of the bidder. Contract Documents, any addenda, and bid forms will be available from https://www.bidexpress.com/solicitations/36751.

A non-mandatory Pre-Bid Meeting for the project will be held electronically on Tuesday, September 10, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. (PST) at the virtual meeting platform Zoom. Attendees can register by visiting http://www.sfcta.org/torpedo-e2-prebid.

Bids will be opened electronically and read aloud on Tuesday, October 1, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. (PDT) at the virtual meeting platform Zoom. Attendees can register by visiting www.sfcta.org/torpedo-e2-opening.

The project consists of 2 adjacent projects: Torpedo Building Preservation Improvements and Reconstruction of the Pier E-2 Parking Lot on Yerba Buena Island, in the City and County of San Francisco.

The project includes an aspirational Disadvantaged Business Enterprise/Small Business Enterprise goal of 22%.

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INVITATION TO BID FOR THE TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT (ITB 24/25-01)

INVITATION TO BID FOR THE TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT (ITB 24/25-01)

The San Francisco County Transportation Authority (Transportation Authority) will receive sealed construction bids for the TORPEDO BUILDING AND PIER E2 CONSTRUCTION PROJECT. The Bid Submission Deadline is Tuesday, October 1, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. (PDT). An electronic bidding process has been adopted for this solicitation. Paper bids will not be accepted. Electronic bids shall be submitted through https://www.bidexpress.com. All bidders must register on https://www.bidexpress.com and create Digital ID through Bid Express to submit a bid. It can take up to five (5) business days to process your Digital ID and it is highly recommended that a Digital ID be active 48 hours in advance of submitting an electronic bid. Costs associated with obtaining said Digital ID and submitting a bid using Bid Express shall be the sole responsibility of the bidder. Contract Documents, any addenda, and bid forms will be available from https://www.bidexpress.com/solicitations/36751.

A non-mandatory Pre-Bid Meeting for the project will be held electronically on Tuesday, September 10, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. (PST) at the virtual meeting platform Zoom. Attendees can register by visiting http://www.sfcta.org/torpedo-e2-prebid.

Bids will be opened electronically and read aloud on Tuesday, October 1, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. (PDT) at the virtual meeting platform Zoom. Attendees can register by visiting www.sfcta.org/torpedo-e2-opening.

The project consists of 2 adjacent projects: Torpedo Building Preservation Improvements and Reconstruction of the Pier E-2 Parking Lot on Yerba Buena Island, in the City and County of San Francisco.

The project includes an aspirational Disadvantaged Business Enterprise/Small Business Enterprise goal of 22%.

“It’s our constitutional responsibility to exercise our roles as justices and provide the public service of the delivery of justice,” they said.

Esquivel, Ortiz and Batres said they intended to continue working remotely.

Court workers across Mexico have stopped work to protest the judicial reform proposal in recent weeks.

On Monday, the vast majority of more than 1,000 SCJN employees present at a meeting voted in favor of job action. The court employs a total of 3,647 workers.

Critics of the constitutional bill — which would allow citizens to directly elect Supreme Court justices and other judges — assert that its approval would undermine the independence of the judiciary.

United States Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar earned a rebuke from López Obrador late last month after asserting that the “popular direct election of judges is a major risk to the functioning of Mexico’s democracy.”

Salazar also claimed that “the debate over the direct election of judges … as well as the fierce politics if the elections for judges in 2025 and 2027 were to be approved, will threaten the historic trade relationship we have built, which relies on investors’ confidence in Mexico’s legal framework.”

He made similar remarks at a press conference on Tuesday, saying that the reform could cause “a lot of damage” to the Mexico-U.S. relationship “if it’s not done well.”

“… I’m saying this because of all the concerns that are reaching me from people who truly want the best for Mexico and the United States. What I can say is that there is a great deal of concern,” Salazar said.

New York-based investment bank Morgan Stanley downgraded its investment outlook for Mexico due to concern over the proposal, while Canadian Ambassador to Mexico Graeme Clark said that investors from his country were also worried.

On Tuesday morning, hundreds of court workers blocked access to the lower house of federal Congress as they sought to prevent lawmakers from discussing the government’s judicial reform proposal.

However, the ruling Morena party organized the transfer of the legislative session to a recreational center in the Iztacalco borough of Mexico City. The session was scheduled to commence at 4 p.m. Mexico City time, with a vote on the constitutional bill expected sometime in the late afternoon or on Tuesday night.

As of Sept. 1, Morena and its allies have a two-thirds majority in the Chamber of Deputies, allowing them to approve constitutional reforms without support from opposition lawmakers.

The Morena-led coalition is just one vote short of a supermajority in the Senate, putting it in a strong position to approve the judicial reform proposal in the upper house as well.

Constitutional reforms must also be ratified by at least 17 of Mexico’s state legislatures — a requirement that shouldn’t be an obstacle for Morena given that the ruling party and its allies have majorities in the congresses of more than 20 states.

With reports from Milenio, Animal PolíticoEl Universal and Reforma

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NOTICE OF CANDIDATES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE IN FOSTER CITY, CALIFORNIA

CNSB # 3845708
NOTICE OF CANDIDATES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following persons have been nominated
for the offices appointed to be filled at the General Municipal Election consolidated
with the Statewide General/Presidential Election to be held at the Municipality of Foster
City on Tuesday, November 5, 2024:
City Council Member [full four-year term]
Vote for no more than Three (3)
Richa Awasthi, Mother/Entrepreneur
Phoebe Shin Venkat, Entrepreneur/Planning Commissioner
Shankar Kenkre, Entrepreneur
Suzy Niederhofer, Municipal Finance Director
Patrick J Sullivan, Incumbent
NOTIFICATION OF MEASURE TO BE VOTED ON
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the following measure will appear on the General Municipal Election
ballot consolidated with the Statewide General/Presidential Election to be held
at Foster City Hall on Tuesday, November 5, 2024.
Vote Centers will be open beginning 29 days prior to Election Day. On Election Day, Vote Centers will be open between 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m.
Voting may be done by mail, or in person on paper or electronic voting machine.
Contact the City Clerk at 650-286-3250 for more information.
_______________________________________
Priscilla Schaus, City Clerk
Posted: August 28, 2024
Measure V (Simple Majority Approval):
To protect the financial stability of Foster City and maintain essential
services, including 911 emergency response, property crime prevention,
street repair, and infrastructure maintenance, shall an ordinance be adopted to amend the business
license tax by varying the rates from $0.75 to $3.00 per $1000 of gross revenue,
retaining the minimum tax of $100/$200 and increasing the maximum tax payment, both with annual adjustments for inflation,
generating approximately $1,400,000 annually for locally controlled general fund purposes,
until terminated by the voters?
Yes 
No 

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MACLA hosts exhibition “A Bridge Over the San Juan River: A Story of Borders”

Southern Gallery

by Magdy Zara

The Latin American Art and Culture Movement (MACLA) opens the exhibition “A Bridge Over the San Juan River: A Story of Borders,” which examines the overlooked conflict between Nicaragua and Costa Rica’s border along the San Juan River

Artists Irene Carvajal and Imara Osorno, both based in San Jose, transcend divisions through painting, video, and on-site installation.

Irene Carvajal is a Costa Rican-American mixed-media artist and teacher based in San Francisco. Her work examines labor, gender, and colonialism and their intersections with politics, globalized economies, and identity. Imara Osorno is a Nicaraguan-American multidisciplinary artist also based in San Francisco. Her work spans painting, printmaking, and sculpture, exploring themes of identity, immigration, and memory, often imbued with a deep appreciation for mythology and storytelling.

This exhibit will be open to the public from September 6 through November 10 of this year, starting at 12 noon at the MACLA gallery, located at 510 South 1st Street in San Jose.

San Mateo County Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month

San Mateo County, as well as other communities in San Francisco, has special programming to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, this time they will hold the Verbo Multicultural Community Festival.

The Verbo Multicultural Community Festival brings together, showcases, and celebrates the vibrant diversity of the Latino community that represents more than nine countries in Central and South America. This year’s festival is especially significant as it commemorates Verbo’s 25th anniversary of serving this community.

This day will feature live music, free food, and family fun; so attendees will be able to dance, taste typical dishes from different countries, as well as exciting games, entertainment for the whole family.

The appointment is at The San Jose Earthquakes, on September 8.

“Corazón del Pueblo” Exhibition at the MCCLA

In the framework of the Latin American Heritage Month, the Mission Cultural Center for Latin Arts has scheduled a series of events among which the group exhibition Corazón del Pueblo stands out.

One of these events is the well-deserved tribute to Patricia Rodríguez, the Chicana pioneer who co-founded Mujeres Muralistas.

Some of the activities planned during this month of celebration are: the art exhibition of “ARTería del Corazón de Patricia Rodríguez”; the celebration of Nina Serrano’s 90th birthday with poetry and live music with Friends of the gallery; On September 13th, the Sip n Paint Latino Pride with Eugenio Rodriguez will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets are $35. On September 14th, the Mexican Night will take place from 4 p.m., while the closing reception is scheduled for October 12th from 3 to 6 p.m.

All of these events will take place in the main gallery of the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, located at 2868 Mission St., San Francisco.

Southern Exposure celebrates its 50th anniversary

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Southern Exposure and honor its legacy, a group art exhibition will be held that highlights its role in the Bay Area art scene.

This exhibition is called “A Leaf, a Gourd, a Shell, a Net, a Bag, a Sling, a Sack, a Bottle, a Pot, a Box, a Vessel.”

Southern Exposure has a major impact on the Bay Area’s diverse arts ecosystem and serves as an important site to spark conversations, explore new formats, launch careers, and educate young people.

Featured works are by artists: Erina Alejo & William Collins; Enrique Chagoya & Kara Maria; Futurefarmers (Amy Franceschini & Michael Swaine) & Shaun O’Dell; Marcel Pardo Ariza & Julián Delgado Lopera; and Pablo Tut.

The 50th anniversary celebration kicks off with a kickoff party featuring a variety of entertainment, including a DJ set by Brown Angel, sweet treats, draft beer from BareBottle Brewing Company, screen printing, and a plant-sharing installation curated by exhibiting artist Erina Alejo, among others.

The grand opening will be on September 14 and will run through November 16, 2024 and will be held at Southern Exposure 3030 20th Street in San Francisco.

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MACLA hosts exhibition “A Bridge Over the San Juan River: A Story of Borders”

Southern Gallery

by Magdy Zara

The Latin American Art and Culture Movement (MACLA) opens the exhibition “A Bridge Over the San Juan River: A Story of Borders,” which examines the overlooked conflict between Nicaragua and Costa Rica’s border along the San Juan River

Artists Irene Carvajal and Imara Osorno, both based in San Jose, transcend divisions through painting, video, and on-site installation.

Irene Carvajal is a Costa Rican-American mixed-media artist and teacher based in San Francisco. Her work examines labor, gender, and colonialism and their intersections with politics, globalized economies, and identity. Imara Osorno is a Nicaraguan-American multidisciplinary artist also based in San Francisco. Her work spans painting, printmaking, and sculpture, exploring themes of identity, immigration, and memory, often imbued with a deep appreciation for mythology and storytelling.

This exhibit will be open to the public from Sept. 6 through Nov. 10 of this year, starting at 12 noon at the MACLA gallery, located at 510 South 1st Street in San Jose.

San Mateo County Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month

San Mateo County, as well as other communities in San Francisco, has special programming to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, this time they will hold the Verbo Multicultural Community Festival.

The Verbo Multicultural Community Festival brings together, showcases, and celebrates the vibrant diversity of the Latino community that represents more than nine countries in Central and South America. This year’s festival is especially significant as it commemorates Verbo’s 25th anniversary of serving this community.

This day will feature live music, free food, and family fun; so attendees will be able to dance, taste typical dishes from different countries, as well as exciting games, entertainment for the whole family.

The appointment is at The San Jose Earthquakes, on Sept. 8.

“Corazón del Pueblo” Exhibition at the MCCLA

In the framework of the Latin American Heritage Month, the Mission Cultural Center for Latin Arts has scheduled a series of events among which the group exhibition Corazón del Pueblo stands out.

One of these events is the well-deserved tribute to Patricia Rodríguez, the Chicana pioneer who co-founded Mujeres Muralistas.

Some of the activities planned during this month of celebration are: the art exhibition of “ARTería del Corazón de Patricia Rodríguez”; the celebration of Nina Serrano’s 90th birthday with poetry and live music with Friends of the gallery; On September 13th, the Sip n Paint Latino Pride with Eugenio Rodríguez will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets are $35. On Sept. 14, the Mexican Night will take place from 4 p.m., while the closing reception is scheduled for Oct. 12th from 3 to 6 p.m.

All of these events will take place in the main gallery of the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, located at 2868 Mission St., San Francisco.

Southern Exposure celebrates its 50th anniversary

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Southern Exposure and honor its legacy, a group art exhibition will be held that highlights its role in the Bay Area art scene.

This exhibition is called “A Leaf, a Gourd, a Shell, a Net, a Bag, a Sling, a Sack, a Bottle, a Pot, a Box, a Vessel.”

Southern Exposure has a major impact on the Bay Area’s diverse arts ecosystem and serves as an important site to spark conversations, explore new formats, launch careers, and educate young people.

Featured works are by artists: Erina Alejo & William Collins; Enrique Chagoya & Kara Maria; Futurefarmers (Amy Franceschini & Michael Swaine) & Shaun O’Dell; Marcel Pardo Ariza & Julián Delgado Lopera; and Pablo Tut.

The 50th anniversary celebration kicks off with a kickoff party featuring a variety of entertainment, including a DJ set by Brown Angel, sweet treats, draft beer from BareBottle Brewing Company, screen printing, and a plant-sharing installation curated by exhibiting artist Erina Alejo, among others.

The grand opening will be on Sept. 14 and will run through November 16, 2024 and will be held at Southern Exposure 3030 20th Street in San Francisco.

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Newsom urged to sign bill to require speeding alert systems on cars

Un nuevo proyecto de ley de California que exige sistemas de advertencia de velocidad en los vehículos no exige que se almacenen datos. Las cuestiones de privacidad quedarían en manos de los fabricantes de automóviles. -- A new California bill requiring speed warning systems on vehicles does not require data to be stored. Privacy issues would remain in the hands of car manufacturers. (Rawintanpin/Adobe Stock)

por Suzanne Potter, Producer

Groups fighting for safer roads are urging Gov. Gavin Newsom to sign a bill requiring new vehicles to have a speed-monitoring system to warn drivers when they go more than 10 miles per hour over the speed limit.

Senate Bill 961 has already passed both houses of the state Legislature.

Marc Vukcevich, director of state policy for the advocacy organization Streets for All, said pedestrian deaths are epidemic.

“Pedestrian deaths have increased 68% since 2011,” Vukcevich pointed out. “With traffic violence as a whole being the number one cause of death for all people from the age of five to 44 in the state of California.”

Several big car manufacturers have come out in opposition to the bill, arguing the warnings could annoy and distract drivers. The change would only apply to new cars sold after 2030 and would add an estimated $60 to $100 to the cost of a car.

Vukcevich noted if drivers slow down even a few miles per hour, it would greatly reduce both the number of accidents and the suffering and death that result.

“The actual physical effect of getting hit by a car at that speed is substantially different from, let’s say, 23 to 30 miles per hour,” Vukcevich pointed out. “It’s really a substantial difference on how likely someone actually lives or dies.”

The European Union has already passed a similar measure. California would be the first state in the U.S. to require speed-warning systems.

One might wonder about the practicality of these systems. What happens when a car’s internet connection is lost? Past research shows drivers worry about irritating other motorists if they drive too slowly, which could be another sticking point. To address these concerns, experts suggest using camera-based traffic sign recognition systems that don’t rely on data connections. Additionally, they recommend allowing the system to be disabled but having it enabled by default with every ignition cycle.

Consumer groups blast bill to change CA Lemon Law

Consumer groups are calling for the withdrawal of a bill that would change the way California’s auto lemon law works – before the legislative session ends this week. Assembly Bill 1755‘s backers say it would reduce delays in getting reimbursed for a defective new car.

Entre los opositores a los cambios a la ley de vehículos defectuosos de California se incluyen la Liga Nacional de Consumidores y la Federación de Consumidores de Estados Unidos. –Opponents of changes to California’s defective vehicle law include the National Consumers League and the Consumer Federation of America.

Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, said it would also mean if a problem arises more than six years after the sale, the lemon law no longer applies.

“It would shorten the statute of limitations for filing a lemon-law case to just one year after the warranty expires. Right now it’s four years after you find out you have a claim,” she explained.

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Supreme Court justices join the strike to protest judicial reform bill

Ocho magistrados de la Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación votaron a favor de la huelga y tres se opusieron. (SCJN) --Eight of Mexico's Supreme Court justices voted in favor of the strike, and three opposed it. (SCJN)

by Mexico News Daily

Supreme Court (SCJN) justices will stop work to protest the federal government’s judicial reform proposal, joining employees of Mexico’s highest court who have already gone on strike.

The SCJN said in a statement on Tuesday that eight justices voted in favor of suspending activities, while three opposed the move.

Court sessions scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday have been suspended, the statement said, adding that the justices “will assess the prevailing situation” next Monday.

The statement also said that the justices agreed to attend to “urgent matters” during their suspension of activities. Nevertheless, their decision to stop work will cause an “operational paralysis” in the SCJN, the Milenio newspaper reported.

The three justices who voted against stopping work — Yasmín Esquivel Mossa, Loretta Ortiz Ahlf and Lenia Batres Guadarrama — were all appointed by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who sent the judicial reform proposal to Congress in February and argues that the country’s judiciary is corrupt and needs renewal.

Esquivel, Ortiz and Batres said in a separate statement that they “vigorously” opposed going on strike.

“It’s our constitutional responsibility to exercise our roles as justices and provide the public service of the delivery of justice,” they said.

Esquivel, Ortiz and Batres said they intended to continue working remotely.

Court workers across Mexico have stopped work to protest the judicial reform proposal in recent weeks.

On Monday, the vast majority of more than 1,000 SCJN employees present at a meeting voted in favor of job action. The court employs a total of 3,647 workers.

Critics of the constitutional bill — which would allow citizens to directly elect Supreme Court justices and other judges — assert that its approval would undermine the independence of the judiciary.

United States Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar earned a rebuke from López Obrador late last month after asserting that the “popular direct election of judges is a major risk to the functioning of Mexico’s democracy.”

Salazar also claimed that “the debate over the direct election of judges … as well as the fierce politics if the elections for judges in 2025 and 2027 were to be approved, will threaten the historic trade relationship we have built, which relies on investors’ confidence in Mexico’s legal framework.”

He made similar remarks at a press conference on Tuesday, saying that the reform could cause “a lot of damage” to the Mexico-U.S. relationship “if it’s not done well.”

“… I’m saying this because of all the concerns that are reaching me from people who truly want the best for Mexico and the United States. What I can say is that there is a great deal of concern,” Salazar said.

New York-based investment bank Morgan Stanley downgraded its investment outlook for Mexico due to concern over the proposal, while Canadian Ambassador to Mexico Graeme Clark said that investors from his country were also worried.

On Tuesday morning, hundreds of court workers blocked access to the lower house of federal Congress as they sought to prevent lawmakers from discussing the government’s judicial reform proposal.

However, the ruling Morena party organized the transfer of the legislative session to a recreational center in the Iztacalco borough of Mexico City. The session was scheduled to commence at 4 p.m. Mexico City time, with a vote on the constitutional bill expected sometime in the late afternoon or on Tuesday night.

As of Sept. 1, Morena and its allies have a two-thirds majority in the Chamber of Deputies, allowing them to approve constitutional reforms without support from opposition lawmakers.

The Morena-led coalition is just one vote short of a supermajority in the Senate, putting it in a strong position to approve the judicial reform proposal in the upper house as well.

Constitutional reforms must also be ratified by at least 17 of Mexico’s state legislatures — a requirement that shouldn’t be an obstacle for Morena given that the ruling party and its allies have majorities in the congresses of more than 20 states.

With reports from Milenio, Animal PolíticoEl Universal and Reforma.

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DNC speakers advocate for freedom but contradict themselves

El gobernador de Minnesota, Tim Walz, y la vicepresidenta Kamala Harris visitan una clínica de abortos en Saint Paul, Minnesota, en marzo de 2024. -- Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Vice President Kamala Harris visit an abortion clinic in Saint Paul, Minnesota in March 2024. | Office of Governor Tim Walz & Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan.

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR:

The content of this article is the opinion of the author and does not reflect the feelings or opinions of El Reportero. It is published to disseminate information and diverse opinions, and to entertain.

by Andrea Trudden,

Op-ed contributor

August 30, 2024 – Last week’s theme for the Democratic National Convention (DNC) — “A Fight for Our Freedoms” — was a masterclass in messaging, as speakers framed abortion as an essential freedom for all Americans. But the freedom Harris and her allies are promoting is one that leaves millions of preborn children without the basic right to life, all while actively suppressing alternatives to abortion that would offer women real choice. Here’s a closer look at four key speakers and the blatant contradictions in their advocacy.

Oprah Winfrey: The American Dream narrative

Oprah Winfrey made a surprise appearance at the DNC and declared, “if you cannot control when and how you choose to bring your children into this world and how they are raised and supported, there is no American dream.” While her statement is meant to support the idea that abortion is a prerequisite for women’s empowerment, it overlooks a tragic truth: if a woman is aborted, she has no dream at all. The fight for “reproductive freedom” rings hollow when it blatantly excludes the most fundamental freedom — the right to live.

It’s also ironic that while the DNC champions women’s rights, it fails to address the reality that more female children are aborted worldwide than males. This imbalance is particularly stark in countries like India and China, where sex-selective abortions have led to a significant gender gap. Fighting for women’s rights becomes meaningless if the very women they claim to defend are being eliminated in the womb.

Governor Josh Shapiro: Twisting “freedom” to push abortion

At the Democratic National Convention, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro emphasized his vision of “real freedom.” In his speech, he claimed, “… it’s not freedom to tell women what they can do with their bodies.” Shapiro’s words fit neatly into the DNC’s “A Fight for Our Freedoms” theme, but his actions reveal a different story when it comes to genuinely supporting women.

One of Shapiro’s first moves as governor was to cut funding for Real Alternatives, a program that each year provided critical resources to over 350,000 pregnant and parenting women in Pennsylvania. For nearly three decades, this initiative offered counseling, baby supplies, and adoption education, giving women options beyond abortion. By defunding this program, Shapiro eliminated support for women who want to carry their pregnancies to term. His decision aligns with the Democratic Party’s narrative that freedom should only extend to abortion access, ignoring the broader support women need for real choice.

Redefining freedom to undermine women

In his remarks at the DNC, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg celebrated “the right kind of politics” as the force behind progress and personal empowerment. He reflected on how the political landscape has evolved, making possible his career and family life as a gay man — experiences, he suggested, were once unimaginable. “This kind of life went from impossible, to possible; from possible to real; from real to almost ordinary,” Buttigieg noted.

However, Buttigieg’s vision of “the right kind of politics” also reveals a darker side: While he champions a politics that has expanded his personal freedoms, he also advocates for policies that exclude and target those with opposing views. His recent comments suggesting that abortion makes men “more free” highlight this contradiction. By promoting abortion as a means of empowerment, Buttigieg supports a selective freedom that undermines the choices and support available to women through pregnancy help organizations. This selective approach to political progress narrows the scope of freedom, marginalizing those who believe in supporting life and reinforcing a political agenda that prioritizes certain freedoms while suppressing others.

Governor Tim Walz: The face of extremism

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, the Democratic nominee for vice president, represents the furthest edge of this “freedom” agenda. During his tenure as governor, Walz has aggressively dismantled common-sense abortion regulations in his state, including parental consent laws and waiting periods. His administration codified the “fundamental right to reproductive freedom,” effectively removing all restrictions on abortion, even those that protect infants who survive failed abortions. Walz’s policies don’t just advance abortion; they create a hostile environment for anyone offering alternatives.

One of Walz’s most egregious actions was the defunding of pregnancy help organizations across Minnesota. These organizations provide crucial resources, counseling, and support to women who want to carry their pregnancies to term. By targeting these services, Walz and his allies, like Shapiro, are stripping away real choices from women, contradicting their entire “freedom” narrative. It is not freedom when one side of the debate is silenced, and alternatives are actively suppressed.

As we examine the rhetoric from leaders like Winfrey, Shapiro, Buttigieg, and Walz, it becomes clear that this “freedom” is selective and exclusionary. They are not fighting for freedom in the broadest sense; they are fighting for a single outcome. If genuine choice were the priority, they would be championing the work of pregnancy help organizations rather than trying to eradicate them. Their vision of freedom is one-sided, hollow, and ultimately destructive, leaving women and children without the support they need to thrive. Christian Post.

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Aid deadline approaches for CA Community College students

by Selen Ozturk

Although California Community Colleges are the nation’s largest higher education system, student aid is the reason many students can afford education at all.

This aid is available through the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and the California Dream Act Application (CADAA) for the 2024-2025 academic year, but  community college students must apply by Tuesday, September 3.

Student aid  

“It’s not too late to go to college. $383 million in aid is available by September 3,” said Dr. Daisy Gonzales, executive director of the California Student Aid Commission (CSAC), at a Thursday, August 15 Ethnic Media Services briefing about student aid. “That deadline is a lifeline for students and for California’s ability to continue as a national leader in higher education for mixed-status families and immigrant students.”

There are 116 community colleges in California. Of the over two million students attending them, over 70 percent come from diverse ethnic backgrounds, with 48 percent identifying as Hispanic.

54 percent of all California students who qualify for financial aid — meaning that their annual income is below $40,000 — attend a community college in the state. 65 percent of California community college students come from Perkins Economically Disadvantaged backgrounds.

Resources are available to help you — regardless of you or your family’s documentation status — cover tuition and costs like rent, food, transportation, books and even childcare,” said Gonzales.

Students who submit their application by September 3 are made eligible for all of the grants and scholarships available in California.

I’m living proof of the power of financial aid,” Gonzales continued. “As a foster youth in Los Angeles, I received the incredible gift of a Cal Grant and a Chafee Foster Youth grant, which let me into  Los Angeles Valley College at age 15. Later, I went to Mills College in Oakland, and then earned a Master’s and PhD at the University of California Santa Barbara.”

“I’ve dedicated my entire career to education, because of this gift,” she added. “There’s still money on the table, and it can make a difference as to whether students can afford their education.”

“I’m still being contacted by undocumented students who are being told, both in high school and adult school and other places that college is not for them,” said Nancy Jodaitis.

“I want to make sure this message comes through loud and clear: Regardless of what happens at a national level, not that it won’t impact us, not that fear isn’t present, but California will continue to stand with immigrants, who have been such an integral part of our community and our state,” she added

In his 2022-2023 state budget, Governor Newsom established a goal for 70 percent of Californians to earn a post-secondary] college degree by 2030.

Immigrant and low-income community college students are key to achieving this goal. California community colleges serve 55 percent of the state’s DACA students, and over 50 percent of all California students qualify for free tuition at a community college through the aid available until September 3.

“Financial aid is not considered part of public charge,” Jodaitis explained. “Every public college and university in California has someone dedicated to supporting undocumented students at the school, and your information will not be shared.”

Student challenges and successes

“Without financial aid, I don’t think I could be I am now,” said Ivan Hernandez, president of Student Senate for California Community Colleges. “I was born in the U.S. but grew up in Mexico. I moved back for treatment after a leukemia diagnosis, and stayed to pursue higher education. My family didn’t have ways to support my education financially, so it was up to me to apply for aid.

“However, this year has been extremely frustrating and challenging for individuals from mixed status families such as myself to access higher education,” he continued.

This year, even students as proactive as Hernandez are facing challenges that threaten their education — namely, FAFSA rollout delays and glitches with a new application form involving miscalculations to formulas used to determine aid.

“I’m the type of individual who usually gets their FAFSA application in a week or two after the application has opened,” — December 2023 for this academic year, said Hernandez. “But I just submitted my FAFSA last week. It was months and months of stress about how I was going to pay for college. I’d made it this far, I didn’t want to give up. I considered getting loans.”

“I constantly reached out to my institution, and FAFSA and I didn’t hear much back from them other than ‘We’re working on it,’” he continued. “But I reached out to CASC and they walked me through, one-on-one, how to fill out the form. It only took about two hours to get done … It actually was easier than the old form, but many students are struggling with the new language being used — even with translated forms, if specific words don’t translate well to other languages.”

FAFSA and CA Dream Act application help is available in multiple languages through CASC — including Spanish, Mandarin, Korean, Armenian and Arabic — by way of resource sheets, online chat, email support under studentsupport@csac.ca.gov and phone support under (888) 224-7268.

“My parents, who never made it to middle school, always say to me, education is the only thing no one can take away from you,” said Hernández. “The California Community College system really changed my life.”

“Especially among undocumented and non-traditional students working full-time and supporting dependents, I see a lot of fear in adjusting back to a classroom, or not having the time to ask for help in-person. But there’s a lot of support available,” he continued. “It’s an investment in the betterment of yourself and your family.

“My message to students is: Sí se puede, sí se pudo, y siempre se podrá,” Hernandez added. “Regardless of challenges you encounter, you can do it, there is always a way.”Students can apply for aid online through FAFSA and CA Dream Act.

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