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Putting the “Federal” back in the Federal Reserve

by Dr. Ellen Brown

Global Research, July 25, 2008 webofdebt.com. (Part 1 of a two-parts article).

In a July 19 Wall Street Journal article titled “Why No Outrage?”, James Grant quoted Mary Lease, a 19th century Populist who urged farmers to “raise less corn and more hell.” Grant notes that financial behavior that would have been met with outrage in the 19th century is now met with near-silence from a too-tolerant populace.

For decades after the Civil War, monetary reform was a chief political issue, one around which whole political parties formed. Why is it hardly mentioned today? Grant suggests that the lack of outrage may be because the old 19th century Populists actually won.

“This is their financial system. They had demanded paper money, federally insured bank deposits and a heavy governmental hand in the distribution of credit, and now they have them.

The Populist Party might have lost the elections in the hard times of the 1890s. But it won the future. . . . They got their government-controlled money (the Federal Reserve opened for business in 1914), and their government-directed credit [Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac]. In 1971, they got their pure paper dollar. So today, the Fed can print all the dollars it deems expedient and the unwell federal mortgage giants, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, combine [to] dominate the business of mortgage origination . . . .”

Mr. Grant may have answered his own question, in another way than he intended. Most people, evidently including Mr. Grant, actually think that the Federal Reserve is a federal agency; and that paper dollars are issued by the government; and that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are federal mortgage giants. The American people are silent because they have been duped into believing they have gotten what they wanted. In fact, what the people got was not at all what the Populists fought for, or what their leader William Jennings Bryan thought he was approving when he voted for the Federal Reserve Act in 1913. In the stirring speech that won him the Democratic nomination for President in 1896, Bryan expressed the Populist position like this: “We say in our platform that we believe that the right to coin money and issue money is a function of government. . . . Those who are opposed to this proposition tell us that the issue of paper money is a function of the bank and that the government ought to go out of the banking business. I stand with Jefferson . . . and tell them, as he did, that the issue of money is a function of the government and that the banks should go out of the governing business. . . .

When we have restored the money of the Constitution, all other necessary reforms will be possible, and . . . until that is done there is no reform that can be accomplished.”

Bryan lost in 1896 and again in 1900, but he went on to lead the opposition in Congress. A major bank panic in 1907 led to a bill called the Aldrich Plan, which would have delivered control of the banking system to the Wall Street bankers.

However, the alert Ilopposition, led by Bryan, saw through it and soundly defeated it. Bryan said he would not support any bill that resulted in private money being issued by private banks. Federal Reserve Notes must be Treasury currency, issued and guaranteed by the government; and the governing body must be appointed by the President and approved by the Senate.

To get their bill past the opposition in Congress, the Wall Street faction changed its name to the Federal Reserve Act and brought it three days before Christmas, when Congress was preoccupied with departure for the holidays. The bill was so obscurely worded that no one really understood its provisions. Its backers knew it would not pass without Bryan’s support, so in a spirit of apparent compromise, they made a show of acquiescing to his demands. Bryan said happily, “The right of the government to issue money is not surrendered to the banks; the control over the money so issued is not relinquished by the government . . . .”

That was what he thought; but while the national money supply would be printed by the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing, it would be issued as an obligation or debt of the government to a private central bank. The Federal Reserve is wholly owned by a consortium of private banks; it is controlled by bankers; and it protects their interests. It issues Federal Reserve Notes (dollar bills) for the cost of printing them (or, more often, for the cost of entering numbers on a computer screen). This privately-issued money is then lent to the government, and it is owed back to the private Federal Reserve with interest. The interest is eventually refunded to the government, but only after the Fed deducts its operating expenses and a 6 percent guaranteed return for its bank shareholders.

Congress and the President have some input in appointing the Federal Reserve Board, but the Board works behind closed doors with the regional bankers, without Congressional oversight or control. Bank CEOs actually sit on the boards of the Fed’s twelve branches. As just one recent example of the private control of public monies, in March of this year the New York Federal Reserve agreed in private weekend negotiations to advance $55 billion of the people’s money so that JPMorgan Chase could buy Bear Stearns at the bargain basement price of $2 a share, down from a high of $156 a share. It was a hostile takeover, not approved by the Bear Stearns shareholders or the American voters. JPMorgan Chase is the bank founded by John Pierpont Morgan, who sponsored the Federal Reserve Act in 1913. Jamie Dimon, the current CEO of JPMorgan Chase, sits on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which dominates the twelve Federal Reserve Banks; and he has huge stock holdings in JPMorgan Chase. His participation in the decision to give his bank $55 billion in Federal Reserve loans is the sort of conflict of interest that federal statute makes a criminal offense; but there is no one to prosecute the statute, because the banking lobby is too powerful to be denied. The banking lobby is powerful because private bankers, not the government, create our money and control who gets it.

(See Ellen Brown, “The Secret Bailout of JPMorgan,” May 13, 2008, www.webofdebt.com/articles; and “What’s the Difference Between Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns?”, June 14, 2008, ibid). Next week: Part 2: “The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was a major coup for the international bankers.

Writing the Truth: Five Difficulties

“Nowadays, anyone who wishes to combat lies and ignorance and to write the truth must overcome at least five difficulties. He must have the courage to write the truth when truth is everywhere opposed; the keenness to recognize it, although it is everywhere concealed; the skill to manipulate it as a weapon; the judgment to select those in whose hands it will be effective; and the cunning to spread the truth among such persons. These are formidable problems for writers living under Fascism, but they exist also for those writers who have fled or been exiled; they exist even for writers working in countries where civil liberty prevails.” Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956).

Community demands Oakland to be a clean port

by the El Reportero’s staff

The mayors of Los Angeles Antonio Villarraigoza and of Oakland Ron Dellums unite in big march to demand that the Port of Oakland: be cleaned from environmental pollution.The mayors of Los Angeles Antonio Villarraigoza and of Oakland Ron Dellums unite in big march to demand that the Port of Oakland be cleaned from environmental pollution.

OAKLAND – Hundreds of truck drivers, community, environment, and trade union leaders, legislators, and the mayors of Oakland Ron Dellums, and of Los Angeles Antonio Villaraigosa, held a march demanding a real solution to the contamination of the port.

It was a about a march that looks to creating consensus in favor of a politics that definitively prevents emission of diesel from loading trucks.

Dellums and Villaraigosa together with the truck drivers leader, Jim Hoffa, said that it is a time to stop the poisoning of the environment through the contamination provoked by the trucks.

The leaders want that the Port of Oakland replaces the old trucks.

“The drivers of the port head the struggle for good jobs and a clean environment,” said Jim Hoffa, president of the loading workers.

“They work very hard to earn wages of poverty and don’t make enough to pay for the maintenance of his old trucks that are throwing poisonous contamination,” Hoffa said.

Thousands march in Oakland against the contamination of the Oakland Port.Thousands march in Oakland against the contamination of the Oakland Port.

Oakland could become the port second in adopting programs of sustainable cleanliness of the trucks, followed by the Port of Los Angeles, which approved a plan, at the beginning of this year, which requires that the drivers serve as employees of the trucking companies, instead of independent contractors.

Democratic Assembly man for Oakland, Sandre Swanson, told the crowd that the current system is broken and is creating a health crisis for the local communities and the workers.

The march, at which approximately 2,000 persons were present, began at the Marriot Hotel Oakland and ended at the Port of Oakland headquarter, at Jack London.

Last year, Swanson organized several public hearings where many truck drivers attested that the current system forces them to operate as independent contractors, instead of employees, working for very low wages and without benefi­ts.

Consequently, they do not have the resources to buy less pollutant trucks, which would help improve the quality of the air that surrounds the port communities.

In 2006, a study revealed that the costs of public health associated with transportation will represent the residents of California $200 billion during the next 15 years.

The serious thing is that these costs will have to be paid by the low-income ethnic communities that reside next to the transportation loading centers. The report can be seen at: http://www.pacinst.org/reports/freight_transport/index.htm.

We need a wide solution that fi ghts both with the contamination and the social injustice,” Swanson said to the protesters. And he ended up by saying that the struggle is in two fronts: For the workers of the ports and for the local residents of, like West Oakland, who pay the effects of the problems derived from the contamination in their health and lives.

PICTURE: The real situation:

  • The drivers of the ports work between 11 and 14 hours at $ dollars per hour.
  • The drivers do not have health and retirement benefits.
  • The long lines to load provoke that the residents and drivers breathe poisonous levels of diesel.
  • The exposing to contamination by diesel doubles the risk of cancer of the residents of West of Oakland, compared to other residents of the bay.
  • The contamination of the port increases the levels of asthma: One of 5 children of West Oakland suffer from this illness. 

Honduras holds Petrocaribe Agricultural Summit

by the El Reportero news services

Presidenta de Argentina Cristina FernándezPresidenta de Argentina Cristina Fernández

TEGUCIGALPA, Jul 30 (Prensa Latina) – Honduras is the venue on Wednesday for the 1st Agriculture Ministerial Summit of Petrocaribe, held to determine how member states will benefit from a fund created with the sale of Venezuelan oil.

The Council of Ministers of Agriculture, body created to run the budget recovered from each barrel exported outside the cooperation agreements and sold at more than $100, will be made official during the summit.

The resources will finance food initiatives to counteract social problems in Petrocaribe’s member states.

Honduras is submitting projects of irrigation, agriculture research, agricultural supplies, fertilizers and improved seeds production, machinery and production equipment, drying and storage, lab installation and rural funding.

The 1st Agriculture Ministerial Summit answers to the initiative approved during the 5th Extraordinary Petrocaribe Ministerial Conference held in Maracaibo, Venezuela, in July 13, 2008.

Killings accelerate again

The Mexican government has a major PR problem: it is failing to show that it is winning the war against violent gangsters. The government does have a decent story to tell but ministers are not articulating it. They are allowing the media to imply that the forces of law and order are on the retreat as the death toll mounts.

Ecuador gives U.S. notice to quit

On July 29 Ecuador for mally gave the U.S. notice that the lease on the airbase at Manta would expire in November 2009. Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa has consistently promised to end the lease. In addition, the draft constitution, which faces a referendum on 28 September, explicitly outlaws any foreign bases on Ecuadorean territory. The U.S., although working out a contingency plan, had apparently nursed faint hopes that the lease on Manta could be renewed. U.S. officials had consistently said that they would not discuss alternatives until the Ecuador had made an announcement on Manta.

The March 1 raid on Ecuador: The beginning of the end

The ramifications of the 1 March raid by Colombia on the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc) camp just inside Ecuador are still developing. This report is being written and edited within weeks of President Alvaro Uribe’s stunning success in securing, without bloodshed, the release of Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other hostages held in captivitity for years by the Farc. Our view is that the 1 March raid was decisive in signalling to the world that the Farc would be defeated. The 2 July rescue of Betancourt is proof that is now happening.

Serious splits emerge in Kirchnerismo as prime minister resigns

Argentina’s prime minister, Alberto Fernández, one of the lynchpins of Kirchnerismo, resigned on 23 July. Fernández felt compelled to step down after the dramatic setback in the senate last week when Vice-President Julio Cobos, the president of the senate, cast the decisive vote to sink the government’s agricultural reform bill and with it the cross-party coalition, Concertación Plural, carefully constructed by Néstor Kirchner when he was in office. President Cristina Fernández was subsequently forced to withdraw the bill, which was at the root of the long-running dispute between the government and the country’s four farming unions.

Latina relates sanctioned tortured by sheriffs during childbirth

­by Tim Chávez

NASHVILLE, Tenn. –  It’s not my Nashville anymore. It’s Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib. We have replicated the water-boarding this nation used against the untried captives we stored on Cuba’s edge and the various degrees of degradation we forced on Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib.

Juana Villegas was literally tortured this month by the Davidson County Sheriff’s Department here in Nashville as she went through childbirth.

She was handcuffed by the wrist and leg to the hospital bedrail during must of her labor, restrained by skin-peeling shackles on her legs for trips to the bathroom and, worst of all, denied by the sheriff s department the use of a breast pump to feed her newborn and ease the pain from her swollen breasts.

Separated from her mother, the infant developed a dangerously high blood level of a chemical that induces jaundice.

All the while, the 33-year-old Villegas was under visible guard by the sheriff’s department, including the watch of e male sentry as she changed from jail jumpsuit into hospital clothes.

Attending nurses left her hospital room in tears.

Villegas, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, was arrested three days before giving birth. She was charged with operating a vehicle without a driver’s license and care State law recognizes a photo ID card and registration as sufficient proof that a person will show up in court for a traffic offense. However, despite having a Matrícula Consular card, vehicle registration, and three children who are U.S. citizens, Villegas spent seven days in sheriffs custody.

Ironically, over the Fourth of July weekend. Nashville was host to an episode of torture that the United Nations forbids.

Nothing in state or federal law required that Villegas, an undocumented immigrant who had been ordered deported once before, be treated so mercilessly. It was the department’s policy and politics under one man, Sheriff Daron Hall, that: led to her inhumane treatment.

In Nashville and Davidson County, more than 3,500 heads of households have been deported in the past 14 months. More than 1,500 human beings LEGALLY in this country have been arrested and questioned for hours by the sheriff’s department. Law enforcement authorities in 57 U.S. communities now have the power to enforce federal immigration law.

Nashville considers itself a progressive city. It is home to Vanderbilt University and a host of other institutions of higher education. Democrats, or what passes for a Democrat in the South, dominate politics here. Yet what is transpiring reinforces the portrayal of the small town run by a Southern sheriff.

The sheriff is allowed to torture expectant mothers by virtue of the 287g deportation

program, authorized by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Amnesty

International USA points out that only three states forbid: the kind of treatment that Villegas endured.

Sick and pregnant female prisoners are chained to their hospital beds all over the USA, it reports.

Because of what happened to Juana Villegas, the organization should investigate and put Nashville under its “human rights watch.” Public servants such as Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, our Congressional Rep. Jim Cooper and Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen – Democrats all—have failed to speak up about this outrage. They should be put on notice that our popular tourism sites will be much less appealing until they open their mouths and call for the termination of 287g.

Only California and Illinois have laws forbidding the torture of expectant mothers in custody. Wisconsin has recently improved its Department of Corrections policy. There is much work to do in other states, too.

For your own good, stay away from Nashville. It is not mine or anyone else’s anymore. It belongs to those who create and support public policy rooted in bigotry and flee from the responsibility of public service to all through the cowardice of silence.

­(Tim Chavez writes political commentary for Hispanic Link News Service in Washington, D.C. A columnist with the Nashville Tennessean for nine years, he has his own web site, www.po/iticalsaisa.com. You can contact him at timchavez787@yahoo.com).

Boxing

July 27 (Sunday), 2008 At The Zamboanga Coliseum, Zamboanga City, The Philippines

  • Eric Canoy (7-0-1) vs. Terdsak Jandaeng (30-3).
  • Narindech Sakchatree (18-2-3) vs. Federico Catubay (21-14-3).

July 29 (Tuesday), 2008 At The Laser Hall, Brno, The Czech Republic

  • Roman Kracik (28-1) vs. TBA Roberto Belge (18-0) vs. Vladimir Borovski (19-31).
  • Lubos Suda (18-2-1) vs. TBA Michal Bilak (18-5) vs. Jindrich Velecky (13-4).

July 30 (Wednesday), 2008 At Yoyogi First Gym, Tokyo, Japan

  • Daisuke Naito (32-2-3) vs. Tomonobu Shimizu (13-2).
  • (The Ring Magazine #2 Flyweight vs. Unranked) (WBC Flyweight belt) Takefumi Sakata (32-4-2) vs. Hiroyuki Hisataka (16-6).
  • (The Ring Magazine #4 Flyweight vs. Unranked) (WBA Flyweight belt) Daigo Nakahiro (17-2) vs. Kenji Yoshida (13-7).

At The Sycuan Resort & Casino, El Cajon, CA

  • (ESPN2) Jose Luis Castillo (56-8-1) vs. Lanardo Tyner (19-1).

At The Entertainment Centre, Sydney, Australia

  • Anthony Mundine (32-3) vs. Crazy Kim (28-4).
  • (The Ring Magazine #2 Super Middleweight vs. Unranked) Billy Dib (19-0) vs. Zolani Marali (19-1).
  • Solomon Haumono (14-0) vs. Cliff Couser (26-15-2).

In Rome, Italy

  • Giovanni Niro (14-0) vs. Pasquale Di Silvio (7-0).

July 31 (Thursday), 2008 In TBA, Russia

  • Grigory Drozd (29-1) vs. TBA Kuvanych Toygonbayev (29-4) vs. TBA Sherzod Husanov (10-0) vs. TBA.

August 1 (Friday), 2008 At TBA, Montreal, Canada

(ESPN2) Jean Pascal (21-0) vs. Fulgencio Zuniga (20-2-1).

(ESPN2) Adonis Stevenson (11-0) vs. Anthony Bonsante (31-9-3).

Olivier Lontchi (16-0-1) vs. TBA Dierry Jean (13-0) vs. TBA.

Gentleman from Costa Rica passes away

by the El Reportero’s staff

José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez: [10/30/1924 a 07/23/2008]José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez [10/30/1924 a 07/23/2008]

José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez of the city of San Jose, Costa Rica, died on July 23 in his hometown. He was 83 years old.

Mr. Arias Rodríguez, who used to be a member of the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity for a period of 20 years, loved to play the guitar. He liked delighting his friends and relatives with romantic songs and amusing himself arranging electrical gadgetry, playing checker, and enjoying soccer matches of his team Herediano.

Widow of Margarita, to whom he dedicated his life and from whom he received full happiness, was a man of very few words but they said a lot.

“Although he was a man of few words, he shared his knowledge with his children and grandchildren,” said his granddaughter Marcela Arias, a resident of Hayward, Calif.

His children survive, Ann, Edwin, Héctor (in Spain), Miguel (in the USA), Macho, William and Oscar, in addition to 17 grandsons.

The personnel of El Reportero sends its most sincere condolence to the mourning family, but especially to his granddaughter Marcela, collaborator of this newspaper.

Toasting the End of Capitalism art show opens in Oakland

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, to be released in theaters nationwide on August 1st.The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, to be released in theaters nationwide on August 1st.

NoneSuch Space presents the photography and vivid Giclee prints of hand cut collages by Bay Area artist, Maria Gilardin. Her work ranges from spoofs on automobile culture, to corporate takeover of farms and dreams of escaping techno-economic absurdity. “It takes me a long time to find just the right pieces for each image. None of the elements are altered or scaled via Photoshop. Each of these ‘quotes’ from pop culture, in their new context, may inspire a smile or a recognition that so much of what we take for granted is not as it seems.

The show runs July 23rd – August 23rd. Gallery hours are Wed-Sat 1 – 6pm & by appointment. First Friday & Artist Reception: August 1st, 6 – 10pm. At the NoneSuch Space, 2865 Broadway at 29th Street, 2nd fl ., Oakland . For more information contact Ann Skinner-Jones, 650-224-3108, annskinnerjones@yahoo.com.

Cuban Dinner and Performance by The Troublemakers Union band

The Cuban Revolution started with the attack on the Moncada barracks on 4July 26, 1953. The revolution was eventually victorious over the U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship. Join us for a celebration of the Cuban Revolution and an evening in solidarity with the Cuban Five—five men unjustly imprisoned in U.S. jails for fighting terrorism.

The proceeds from this benefit will go toward the HUGE billboard for the Cuban Five to be displayed at Mission and 10th Streets in San Francisco for the month of September, the 10th year of their unjust imprisonment.

Carmen MilagrosCarmen Milagros

The benefit will feature a special performance by “The Troublemakers Union Band,” an update on the Cuban Five’s freedom struggle, a delicious Cuban dinner, and door prizes. The event will be Friday, July 25 from 6 to 9 pm at the Centro Del Pueblo, 474 Valencia St. (between 16th and 17th). $10–$20 sliding scale (no one turned away for lack of funds) For information contact the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five, info@freethefive.org, 415-821-6545.

San Francisco’s Voices of Latin Rock at Stern Grove

Born in the Mission District, Latin Rock was a defining sound of the late 1960s and early 1970s when bands like Santana, Malo, Sapo, Abel and the Prophets, and Azteca melded the rhythms of Latin music with funk, soul, and rock. Local favorite Samba Da will lead the afternoon with a high-powered concoction of Brazilian beats, samba, funk, reggae, and hip-hop. On Sunday, July 27 at 2:00 p.m. Stern Grove is located in the park at 19th Avenue and Sloat Boulevard, San Francisco. For more information go to www.sterngrove.org.

Carmen Milagro Band at the San Mateo County Fair

Come out and say hello to THE CARMEN MILAGRO BAND on 8/10/08 12 -1:30 pm show at the Brews and Blues Stage at the San Mateo County Fair. For a preview, take a listen to guest radio host Liliana Aranda of Starstruck Management who has pledged to play some original Carmen Milagro songs (maybe Bailando Haci es la Vida, Kisses and Caresses or Living Legend) on 680/1050 AM KNBR during her 3-hour appearance on the air with Fitz & Brooks on Friday, July 25th! Or just listen online at www.KNBR.com. More information at www.milagromusic.com.

­

Rufino Tamayo’s painting breaks record

­por Antonio Mejías-Rentas

TrovadorTrovador

RECORD BREAKER: A rare work by Mexican master Rufino Tamayo that was at the center of a recant legal battle has sold at auction for the highest amount ever paid for a Latin American painting. Trovador sold for $7 2 million this month at New York’s Christie’s auction house. The 1945 painting of a musician with his guitar was sold by Virginia’s Randolph College at more than double the expected price. Thepainting had been donated to the school.

Last November opponents got an injunction to block the sale, but dropped the case to focus on a court challenge to the former women’s school’s 2006 decision to go coed.

The iconic, colorful canvas, not seen at auction for 40 years, went to an anonymous buyer.

The previous highest price for a Tamayo was 52.59 million. The previous record for a Latin American painting belonged to Frida Kahlo’s Raíces, which sold in 2006 for $5.6 million.

Several records for Latin American art were broken at two major New York auction houses, including a second Tamayo, Comedor de sandías, sold at Sotheby’s for $3.6 million.

Both Christie’s and Sotheby’s reported their highest-ever totals for one-evening sales of Latin American art, signaling a healthy, growing market in the category.

Christie’s reported two-day take of $33.9 million also included works by Alfredo Ramos Martinez ($2.2 million) and Claudio Bravo ($1 3 million) among its top-ten sellers. Across town, Sotheby’s one-night sale of $21 million included a record for a work by Joaquin Torres-Garcia, which sold for 51.7 million.

JULIETA JUNE: Audiences got a first peek at one of the year’s most anticipated recordings last week as MTV Tr3s continued an extensive marketing campaign for one of its most popular artists.

The bilingual, youth-oriented network premiered the Julieta Venegas MTV Unplugged special June 5. Recorded earlier this year in Mexico City, it featured a guest performance by Gustavo Santaolalla and new, acoustic takes on the Tijuana~born singer songwriter’s best known songs.

As part of an ongoing on-air campaign, MTV Tr3s will tape an appearance by Julieta Venegas on its signature Mi TRL show on June 17, the day the Julieta Venegas MTV Unplugged CD and DVD go on sale. The taping at MTV’s Times Square studio will be projected outside on a 44-foot high screen and air on the channel on June 19.

A series of Julieta Venegas vignettes have been airing on the channel since mid-May and additional related material can be seen on the website unplugged.mtv3s.com. Hispanic Link.

Dept. of Elections certifi es Save teh JROTC Initiative for the Nov. ballot

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

After determining a raw count of 13,503 petitions, the Department of Education certifi ed that the Save JROTC effort has collected enough signatures to qualify for the November Ballot. The Junior Reserve Offi cers’ Training Corps program is a 90-year old program that has served an average of over 1,600 high school students annually. The school board voted in 2006 to ax the program on the grounds that it is operated by the U.S. military, which bars gays and lesbians, and that the board has no say over who is hired as an instructor. The board then voted to let the program continue through spring 2009. Last month, however, it said it would no longer grant physical-education credit for the program, a move that will make it impossible for most students to fi t JROTC into their schedules next school year.

Supervisor race for Districts 9 and 11 Heats Up

San Francisco Supervisor races have kicked into high gear, with local analysts calling districts 9 and 11 the most interesting contests, including multiple progressive candidates. In District 9, Police Commisioner David Campos, School Board member Mark Sánchez, long-time Dolores Huerta’s allied Eva Royale, and Mission Anti-Displacement activist Eric Quezada, are squaring off to replace Tom Ammiano. In District 11, Community College Board member Julio Ramos, Supervisor Daly aide and longtime labor activist John Avalos, and Cecilia Chung, a Milk Club activist and head of the Transgender Law Center, are competing to replace Gerardo Sandoval.

Water Supply Reliability Bill praised by Mayor’s Office

Mayor Gavin Newsom praised SBXX 1, the Water Supply Reliability appropriations bill announced today by California State Senate President pro Tem Don Perata and Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, citing its prudent and timely investments to address water challenges throughout California, all with existing bond dollars. More than 70 percent of San Francisco’s 900 miles of sewers are more than 70 years old, and many are at risk for failure and badly in need of replacement.

San Francisco has requested Proposition 1E funds to design and construct projects that will reduce flooding, improve stormwater collection and treatment and reduce untreated discharges into San Francisco Bay or the Pacific Ocean.

Supervisors to vote on $273 million worth of city power plants

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors debated last week whether to build $273 million worth of new fossil fuel-burning power plants in and around the Southeast communities of Bayview-Hunters Point and Potrero. It was once thought that building the new power plants was required as the only means of shutting the aging Mirant Potrero Power Plant. However, a coalition of residents, activists, and Supervisors Ross Mirkarimi, Michela Alioto Pier, Chris Daly, and Tom Ammiano issued a call that culminated in last month’s announcement by Mayor Gavin Newsom that he had secured a commitment from state regulators to shut 94 percent of the Potrero Plant in 2010, without the new power plants.

The Board must now choose a preference between retrofitting the remaining Potrero units, estimated to be shut down within 3 to 5 years, or building the new power plants, which will run from 18 to 30 years depending on their hours of operation.