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Study documents children’s distress following ICE raids

­by Adolfo Flores

A study released Oct. 31 by the National Council of La Raza and The Urban Institute, has found that children suffered from mental7and health disorders after their parents were seized in workplace immigration raids.

The first-of-its-kind report, ‘’Paying the Price: The Impact of Immigra7tion Raids on America’s Children,” found that for every two detained adults, one child was left behind. Two-thirds of the children were under age 10.

Nearly all of the children exhibited negative emotional and behavioral reactions.

For some it led to depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, separation anxiety and in one child suicidal thoughts, the study revealed.

In the United States more than 3 million U.S.-born children have at least one undocumented parent.

Between 2002 and 2006 the number of undocumented persons arrested at their workplace increased from 500 to 3,600.

“The raids have a destabilizing impact on children’s’ families, schools and social network,” said report co-author Rosa María Castaneda. “All of these influences play a critical factor in all of these children’s well-being.”

The study followed 30 afflicted families for months after ICE raids in New Bedford, Mass.; Greeley, Colo, and Grand Island, Neb., last year. A total of 912 people were arrested and 506 children were directly affected.

Many detainees were held in facilities outside their states and allowed only limited telephone access.

Single parents, primary care-givers and those with family health issues were released within a day or two, but there were inconsistencies in parents’ release.

Some did not disclose they had children for fear they also would be detained or placed in foster care.

In Greeley and Grand Island a large number of those who were arrested accepted voluntary departure. Some were detained for up to six months.

There weren’t that many voluntary departures in New Bedford, where almost all those seized were from Guatemala and Central America.

Initially, community organizations provided most children left behind with strong social support, but resources were quickly drained.

Rev. E. Roy Riley of New Jersey met Berta, a single mother who hid under the floor boards beneath her work station during one of the raids. Berta continues to worry about her son’s welfare.

“You could say, well, Berta, you should have thought about that before you moved to this country,” said Rev. Riley.

“But for the vast majority of these young immigrant families that is exactly what they did…they wanted more than anything to give their children a good home’ sufficient food, and a good education.”

Rep Hilda Solis (D-Calif.), who introduced the Families First Immigration Enforcement Act Oct. 25, is pressing for a hearing on the study.

Her proposal would require Immigration and Customs Enforcement to give access to social service agencies to screen and interview detainees because of problems that arise when a person lies to the agency due to fear and intimidation.

It would also force ICE to release sole caretakers’ those who care for children with special needs, pregnant and nursing mothers within 72 hours of their apprehension if they’re not subject to mandatory detention or pose an immediate fl ight risk.

The Senate companion bill was introduced by Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass).

“Members on both sides of the aisle care very deeply about the education, well-being and health of these children’” said Miriam Calderon, a senior policy analysis for NCLR. “It’s clear that (the raids) are un-dermining their goals.’’

The Urban Institute expects to conduct a follow-up study in a year to report the long-term effects that raids have on immigrant children.

“We also want to look at a broader range of types of immigration raids, like smaller raids, some non-Latino populations and probably some raids that occurred in people’s homes’ in addition to the ones that occurred in the work place,” said Andy Capps’ co-author of the study.

The study is available at ­www.ncir.org.
Hispanic Link.

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Boxing

Saturday, November 3 – at Las Vegas – (Showtime)

  • 12 rounds, WBC super featherweight title: Juan Manuel Marquez (47-3-1, 35 KOs) vs. Rocky Juarez (27-3, 19 KOs).­
  • 12 rounds, IBF featherweight title: Robert Guerrero (20-1-1, 13 KOs) vs. Martin Honorio (24-3-1, 12 KOs).

Sunday, November 4 – at Saitama, Japan

  • 12 rounds, Takefumi Sakata (31-4-1, 15 KOs) vs. Denkaosan Singwancha (40-1, 16 KOs).

Saturday, November 10 – at New York

  • 12 rounds, WBA & interim WBC welterweight titles: Shane Mosley (44-4, 37 KOs) vs. Miguel Angel Cotto (30-0, 25 KOs).
  • 12 rounds, WBC lightweight title: Joel Casamayor (34-3-1, 21 KOs) vs. Jose Armando Santa Cruz (25-2, 14 KOs).

Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra in concert

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

­Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra in concert

Gustavo Dudamel en Concierto en The Candy Store on Oct. 28Gustavo Dudamel en Concierto en The Candy Store on Oct. 28

The acclaimed young Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel, recently appointed music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, leads his Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra (SBYO) in concert Sunday, November 4 at 7 p.m. at Davies Symphony Hall as part of the San Francisco Symphony’s Great Performers series. The Orchestra is the crown jewel of Venezuela’s National System of Youth and Children’s Orchestras (El Sistema), a national musical and social organization that is changing the lives of young people by giving them musical training and the opportunity to play and perform orchestral music.

El Sistema now reaches 250,000 young people in music schools and has spawned 125 youth orchestras across Venezuela. Tickets are $25-$81, available through SFS Ticket Services at (415) 864-6000 or online via the SFS Web site at www.sfsymphony.org.

City College of San Francisco Board of Trustees open meetings

The Board of Trustees of the San Francisco Community College District will hold its regular monthly meetings on November 8 and 20. Its study session will be on Thursday, November 8 at 5pm, its action meeting on Tuesday, November 20 at 6pm, both in the Auditorium at the College’s 33 Gough Street facility. The public is invited to attend both meetings. For further information, visit the City College of San Francisco website at www.ccsf.edu.

International Latino Film Festival

The 11th International Latino Film Festival comes to the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts this weekend, November 3rd and 4th, featuring the best features, documentaries and shorts from Latin America, Spain, and U.S. ­Latinos. This weekend will feature Upa! An Argentine Film, and many more. $5 Admission includes panel conversations and discussions with filmmakers. See www.latinofilmfestival.org for details.

Free workshop on street art as resistance

Join local artists from around San Francisco and Oakland for this hands-on workshop on low cost and low skill methods for making street art. What can you do when rich people squeeze you out of your neighborhood seemingly with the full support of City Hall?

Reclaim public space! Artists will instruct in simple and cheap technique, while providing information on and images of the rich history of art as resistance from around the world and back to the Mission.

On Saturday, facilitators will go over the history as well as inexpensive methods for screenprinting. Sunday’s workshop will focus on the history and production of stenciling. These workshops are intended for long-time Mission residents and other folks fi ghting displacement.

On Saturday and Sunday, November 10 – 11. Workshops will be led in Spanish as well as English at the Modern Times Bookstore on Mission Street, for more information go to ­www.moderntimesbookstore.com.

Painter’s Rufi no Tamayo’s stolen painting may reach $1 million at auction

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Tres Personajes, la pintura robada de Rufi no TamayoRufi no Tamayo’s stolen painting, Three Personages

ART FOR A STEAL: A painting by the late Mexican master Rufi no Tamayo stolen 20 years ago and reportedly recovered from the trash is expected to fetch up to $1 million at auction next month.

Tres personajes, a 1970 colorful work from Tamayo’s mature period, was purchased for $55,000 by an unidentifi ed Houston couple in 1977. It was stolen in 1987 from a warehouse where they had placed it while moving. The painting was recently featured in the “Missing Masterpieces” segment of the PBS program Antiques Roadshow.

New York resident Elizabeth Gibson did not immediately identify the painting when she found it, according to an interview with the Associated Press, Iying in trash along a street on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. She picked it up and took it home and later identified it when her research led her to the Antiques Roadshow Web site.

New York auction house Sotheby’s said the painting could bring between $750,00 and $1 million when it is sold at its Latin American Art auction on Nov. 20. Gibson will receive the $15,000 reward the Houston couple put up when it was stolen, plus an undisclosed percentage of the sale of the painting.

The theft of the painting is still being investigated by authorities.

Born in 1899 in Oaxaca, Tamayo is considered one of Mexico’s most important 20th century painters. Coincidentally, a retrospective of the artist —who died in 1991—opened last week at the Museo Tamayo Ante Contemporáneo in Mexico City.

IN OTHER STOLEN ART NEWS:

  • A New Jersey truck driver who stole a 1778 painting by Spanish master Francisco de Goya from an unattended truck and then claimed he found it in his basement was charged last week with theft.

Niños con carro, insured at a value of about $1 million, was being transported from the Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan to the institution that owns it, the Toledo (Ohio) Museum of Art. It’s been returned undamaged.

  • Burglars broke into a ­foundry in Tuscany, Italy, this month and stole seven bronze statues by Colombian artist Fernando Botero. The insured works, valued at about $5 million in total, depict figures in Botero’s known rounded style.
    Hispanic Link.

Community asks San Mateo county to halt foreclosures

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Members of the community ­group San Mateo County ACORN attended the San Mateo County Board meeting this week to pressure the Supervisors to pass a resolution that would stay the foreclosure crisis. The resolution calls on local subprime lenders to voluntarily enact a 3 month moratorium on foreclosures and put delinquent or at risk borrowers, who are in unaffordable loans, into modified loans that are 30 year, fixed rate, and affordable based on the borrowers income.

Property owners, local governments, lenders and investors alike stand to lose billions of dollars; estimated losses for the San Francisco-San Mateo metropolitan area alone exceed $210 million– $25 billion nationally.

“ACORN is working with our elected officials to protect homeowners and neighborhoods from the crime and diminished property values brought on by too many foreclosures,” said Estela Baldovinos, a resident of South San Francisco and member of ACORN who is fighting to save her home from foreclosure. “Lenders and investors need to do their part to protect our communities.”

San Francisco moves foreclosuresto allow greater access to renewable fuels

Tom AmmianoTom Ammiano

Following several months of research, Supervisor Ammiano introduced the “Fair Retail Pricing” and “Alternative Fuels Access” ordinances at the Board of Supervisors meeting this week. Together, these ordinances make it easier for station owners to procure and stock alternative fuels, freeing independent operators from franchise agreements that limit their ability to procure alternative fuels.

“Independent operators are being squeezed out of the market and consumers are feeling the pinch like never before,” Ammiano said. “Assuring small business owners maintain ownership of gas stations in the City is the only way we can ensure healthy price competition, benefiting both our small business community as well as consumers.”

Lawsuit aims to bring Medi-Cal benefits to youth in custody

Dennis HerreragrafoDennis Herreragrafo

City Attorney Dennis Herrera has filed suit against the State of California for illegally preventing disadvantaged youth from receiving Medi-Cal benefits while they are in the custody of a public institution. Because a high percentage of minors in custody suffer from medical conditions such as substance abuse and severe mental illnesses, he claimed, their access to Medi-Cal benefits is crucial to their health. Herrera’s lawsuit seeks to stop state administrators from denying Medi-Cal benefits for inpatient psychiatric hospital care needed by detained youth, and requiring the restoration of benefits for all covered medical services ­upon their release.

“The state has been illegally denying Medi-Cal benefits to thousands of children for years,” said Kimberly Lewis from the Western Center on Law and Poverty. “Most of these children have serious emotional and psychiatric disabilities that are left untreated when their Medi-Cal is cut off and it can take months to get coverage again after they are forced to reapply.”

The noose – Mexicans can’t forget their Texas legacy

­by Andy Porras

The noose is on the loose. Again.

Ever since those nooses dangling from a schoolyard tree raised racial tensions in Louisiana, the frightening symbol of segregation-era lynching has been hanging around the country.

The ghosts of Jim Crow and certain Texas Rangers are smiling and dancing in their graves. The rope trick they made famous is making a comeback.

Tejanos share memories of their ancestors facing situations similar to those of their darker brothers.

According to William D. Carrigan and Clive Webb’s “The Lynching of Persons of Mexican Origin or Descent in the United States, 1848 to 1928,” Texas mobs lynched at least 597 persons of Mexican descent.

“This does not include many incidents of other forms of mob violence,” writes Chicano historian Dr. Rudy Acuña. “This is considerable, considering that the Mexican population was small in comparison to the black population.”

Is placing a noose on a schoolyard tree a deplorable act of racism? Or is it just a prank, as that Louisiana school superintendent labeled his white students’ actions? Some of the current rash of “noose” incidents are being investigated as possible hate crimes. Most educators and law enforcement officials agree there’s no ambiguity. No matter their skin color, people understand exactly what it means.

The South’s brutal acts are more widely known, but Texas had its own barbarians who went around roping first and asking questions later.

Thanks to educator/journalist Jovita Idar (1885-1946), we have written accounts of occurrences during a tumultuous time for Tejanos in the border city of Laredo during the Mexican Revolution of 1910.

On U.S. soil, a second “war,” unnoticed by school textbooks, was raging. Los Rinches (Tejano lingo for the Rangers) were out and about lynching brown men, women and even children who sought refuge from their land’s political upheaval.

Jovita, whose students were mostly Mexican children, became a compelling historical figure. Throughout Texas, the lack of books and other basics often led Tejana teachers to abandon their pedagogical dreams and search for other careers. Jovita joined two brothers as a writer for her father’s newspaper, La Crónica, Her “radical” words often detailed the rabid discrimination against the Mexican students. But the reports that really ruffled Texas government’s feathers were about the Texas Rangers.

One laid bare the truth about the Rangers lynching a Mexican child in the town of Thorndale, near Austin. Another told of a 20-year-old Tejano burned alive by a mob in Rocksprings.

Soon thereafter the young periodista-journalist, called for organizing against the racist and brutal acts by the Rangers and white Texans in general. The Rangers added her to their hit list.

Jovita’s motto, Por la raza y para la raza — by the race and for the race” — became a rallying cry that led the formation of the feminist group La Liga Femenil Mexicanista.

Despite Rangers’ threats to put an end to such extreme ideas, the Tejanos formed their own schools, allowing formerly excluded students to enroll at no cost. They even provided the students with free lunch and school clothes.

Fearing the Mexican Revolution would spread into South Texas, the Rangers increased their presence along the border, continuing their repression against all people of Mexican origin. Jovita’s editorials were considered inflammatory by state and federal officials to the point that she was “cautioned” by both to curb her criticism.

In 1914 Jovita hit the hate jackpot with an article critical of none other than U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, who had deployed troops to the border. it was just the thing Los Rinches needed to come calling. Sent to destroy her father’s newspaper offi ce, an entire company of Texas’ fi nest mounted their high- grade steeds, surrounded the office and demanded her presence.

A Tejano crowd gathered to see what caused so many Rangers to come to town.

They gasped as Jovita stood in the doorway resisting the Ranger captain who had ordered her to get out of the way.

Jovita stood motion less. The Ranger captain and the journalist exchanged words. She read him her rights. The tall Texan with a badge ordered his men to back off, and he did the same.

Such a stand comes with a heavy price. The men returned in the dark of night with sledgehammers. They annihilated La Crónica. They destroyed the conscience of a community, but they failed to silence its messenger. For a memorable moment in Texas history, a Tejana cut loose the noose.

Jovita would write again from a safer place, San Antonio, where she and her husband lived out their lives.

(Andy Porras is publisher of the Sacramento area bilingual monthly Califas. Reach him at ­califasap@yahoo.com). ©2007

How to unseat a former president

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON– Mexico’s former president Vicente Fox has a talent for drawing almost as much criticism out of office as when he was the incumbent

In July of last year, he was succeeded by Felipe Calderón, of his own center right National Action Party, PAN in Spanish. Fox is widely credited with advancing democracy and reforming Mexico’s economy by controlling inflation and lowering interest rates. But he left office with a trail of disappointments.

Since that time, Fox has followed in the tradition of former heads of state, such as George Bush Sr., Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, U.K.’s Tony Blair, and Spain’s José María Aznar. They have remained active and at times vocal.

However, Mexico has only tepid acceptance for its former presidents going public, certainly not by the old Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI in Spanish, that held power for 72 years, and now twice beaten for the presidency.

Political animosities die slowly and Fox’s antagonists seek to hang a personal enrichment jacket on him. Other allegations circulating include influence peddling by his stepchildren through his marriage to Marta Sahagún, and aspersions about Vámos México, the foundation they head. A commission has been authorized to investigate some of the allegations.

At the same time, Vicente Fox might be on the verge of taking an important place on the world stage. In late October he was elected co-president of Centrist Democrat International, the association of center-right parties around the world. He is also setting up a presidential library and think tank at his ranch. Throughout October, he has promoted In the United States his autobiographical book, “Revolution of Hope,” written with Rob Allyn.

While he was abroad last week, a group in Boca deL Río, Veracruz, toppled a statue of Fox before it was to be dedicated. When asked about it, Fox told me the people responsible for the “mischief,” were not average citizens but operatives of the state’s federal senator Fidel Herrera Beltrán. “He himself announced it,” Fox told me.

Herrera Beltrán, a PRI member, heads the Senate’s policy coordinating committee. More aftershocks were to follow. In Los Angeles, Fox walked out on Telemundo52 interviewer Rubén Luengas after uncomfortable questions about who owns certain properties in Guanajuato state near his ranch. Records appear to bear his wife Marta Sahagún’s name.

Then in San Jose, Calif., speaking at a downtown hotel, Fox drew a small protest across the street at the Plaza de César Chávez.

At a press conference, Fox claimed Herrera Beltrán was behind the anti-Fox campaign in Mexico, and alluded to the senator’s presidential aspirations. Just to make sure the mud stuck, Fox said Herrera “has a Drug Enforcement Agency, DEA, record related to narcotrafficking.”

Herrera called Fox’s 1charge a smoke screen, to distract public opinion from Fox’s administration corruption. The issue, he told El Universal, a Mexico City daily, was a recycled 10-year-old matter found to be a complete lie.

Víctor Valencia de los Santos, who heads the commission inquiring into the Fox administration, called the whole matter “a rude strategic distraction.”

The issues and name-calling heated up after Quién magazine published photos of the Fox’s homestead, Rancho Cristóbal. Questions immediately arose about whether government funds contributed to the renovations.

“It is evident he got rich during his six years in office,” Lino Korrodi, a former Fox campaign finance manager, told El Universal. Now a critic, Korrodi says Fox didn’t have the kind of money to renovate the ranch during his presidency.

Either legitimate charges are made before the appropriate tribunals or let historians argue over the details.

The danger of failing to let Fox become an elder statesman is that a cynical North American public can further lose confidence in Mexico’s emerging democracy and economy. Stereotypes, in matters such as this, are easier to come by than the facts.

Already, public opinion is making life-after-the-presidency read like a soap opera, a telecomedia. Ex-presidents have a lot to offer still. They do. Really they do.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly ­commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail: joseisla3@yahoo.com].© 2007­

They blame the undocumented and punish the children, but who are the real culprits?

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin RamirezMarvin Ramirez

The more I see the fury perpetrated against undocumented immigrants by immigration officials (USIC), despite the clamor from the business sector, churches and labor groups to stop the immigration raids of non-criminal, hard working people, the more I get to see the hate from those who rule from the top, the ones who give the order.

The more I see war and war, and more money to support it, the more I see the true intentions of the bankers who control the United States to possess the world and its people.

And I get more confused about North Americans who keep turning their eyes the other ways to the problems the country is facing: a continued deterioration of the dollar abroad, the economy as a whole plummeting ­while artificially injecting into the economy with phony money created by the Federal Reserve Bank without gold or silver backing.

And this is being done after the current real estate fiasco that is making the middle class to lose their homes.

Latin America, meanwhile, continues going on a different political path, away from that of Washington’s sphere of influence to liberate themselves from the tentacles of the International Monetary Fund that have kept their countries in misery for decades wile ruled by U.S.-backed dictatorial regimes.

At home, in our Latino communities, the pain is being felt like never before, on the children population, the future of the nation.

While Latinos – mainly those undocumented who have been contributing to our ailing Social Security fund for the main population to benefit – who are and have been the backbone of the U.S. economy, keep being targeted and persecuted when things are not going well everywhere else. They are hunted like animals.

The children, those whose parents came into the country undocumented,  are feeling the emotional trauma caused by the immigration raids, on top of the economic distress caused in the absence of their parents when they are taken away from their homes and deported.

A new report released today by the National Council of La Raza (NCLR) and the Urban Institute found that for every two people detained in immigration enforcement operations, one child is left behind. Two-thirds of these children are U.S. citizens and a similar share is under age 10.

“The local governments and communities we studied did not have  adequate resources to deal with children’s needs in the aftermath of the raids,” said Randy Capps, a demographer with the nonpartisan Urban Institute, according to a Wednesday’s written statement.

“At the same time, the federal government did not  have in place policies and procedures that explicitly consider the protection of children,” Capps said.

According to information I’ve found while researching the internet, what is going on now is a state of emergency in the U.S., but no one is going to tell you that. No matter how hard the media tries to make things look promising and normal in the economy, things are not going right. The U.S. national debt owed to the international banks, is so huge that there is no way it can be paid. And soon, our dollar could be replace by either the Euro or the Renminbi, the name of the Chinese currency.

To disguise reality, they (the international bankers) keep fi ghting the war on terrorism sending more money to Iraq and taking away our constitutional rights at home little by little. So they start with the hunting of undocumented immigrants, and don’t care about the children left behind.

In other related news, one ultimate act of control of every one of us will be the implementation of the Real ID, which is supposed to be implemented in 2008.

If you read this edito­rial, please don’t accept it. Some have said that the U.S. Mexican fence being built now is not to stop illegal immigration, rather to stop us from leaving. Many states are turning against it, although they are saying is because of its high cost.

With the Real ID, which will reveal every commercial, medical transaction your engage in, they won’t let you out if you owe money, etc. Do not accept it. It’s not to control terrorism, but to control us as human beings with political and fi nancial ends.

HCF announces scholarships

100 students to be awarded scholarships

Washington, D.C – A consortium led by the Hispanic College Fund (HCF) with the support of The Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) and the United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation (UNCFSP) announced the opening of the NASA MUST scholarship application. The NASA MUST scholarship application is now available online athttp://www.hispanicfund.org. with a deadline of February 1, 2008.

The NASA MUST consortium was awarded a grant to administer NASA’s Motivating Undergraduates in Science and Technology program (MUST), a program that awards scholarships and internships to undergraduate students pursuing degrees in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math, more widely known as STEM fields. Students from underrepresented groups in STEM are encouraged to apply.

The NASA MUST program will award100 undergraduate students a one-year scholarship of up to one-half of the student’s tuition and academic fees not to exceed $10,000 per academic year plus a maximum stipend of $5,000 to participate in a mandatory summer research experience at a NASA center. A NASA center summer placement is based on a student’s career goals and depends on internship availability. Additionally, students will benefit year-round from tutoring, lecture series, faculty and peer mentors.

The NASA MUST Consortium is a dynamic collaboration of three qualified and experienced not-for-profit organizations with applicable expertise to manage all facets of the NASA MUST Program. The HCF, SHPE and UNCFSP each have an established track record of providing education and support services to Minority Institutions, faculty, and students.

For more information and details about the NASA MUST program, visit any of the Consortium member websites: http://www.hispanicfund.org ­, http://www.shpe.org or http://www.uncfsp.org. For information about NASA’s education programs, visit http://www.education.nasa.gov. Consortium member contacts include: Matthew Goldmark, HCF, (202) 296-5400; Rafaela Schwan, SHPE (817) 272-1116 and Sonya Green, UNCFSP, (703) 205-7636. (Hispanic Wire.)­

St. Luke’s Hospital could close

by Ali Tabatabai

Good-bye to St. Lukes Hospital?: The California Nurses Association holds a demonstration on the steps of SF City Hall on Thursday prior to a committee hearing of the Board of Supervisors on California Pacific Medical Center's plan to close St. Luke's Hospital. Good-bye to St. Lukes Hospital? The California Nurses Association holds a demonstration on the steps of SF City Hall on Thursday prior to a committee hearing of the Board of Supervisors on California Pacific Medical Center’s plan to close St. Luke’s Hospital. Asamblyman Mark Leno, speaks against the closing. (photo by Jennifer Salgado)­

Inpatient emergency care services at St. Luke’s Hospital in San Francisco’s Mission District were resuscitated for another 90 days, after hospital executives admitted on Thursday to neglecting a state law requiring official notice be sent to the city’s health commission before a closure.

At a hearing before the Board of Supervisors committee and a capacity crowd of hospital staff and community members, California Pacific Medical 7Center officials announced they will comply with the law known as Proposition Q and said their plans for the hospital was the first step in a process to redevelop city’s healthcare landscape.

“Whatever the future is for St. Luke’s and CPMC’s presence in the south of market, it’s not going to be a financially based decision from a standpoint of looking to make a profit,” said Christopher Willrich, California Pacific’s vice president of strategy and business development.

According to Willrich, St. Luke’s is currently lospopulaing $30 to $35 million each year while 60 percent of its acute hospital beds lay empty on any given day. He added that 85 percent of the hospital’s emergency room visits are for “low-level” emergencies such as asthma attacks and diabetes complications.

­CPMC, an affiliate of Sutter Health, had originally declared its plans to cut its pediatric and neonatal intensive care unit starting Nov. 16.–eventually eliminating all long-term emergency stays and turning St. Luke’s into an outpatient ambulatory hub by 2009. To balance the loss of St. Luke’s, CPMC also intends to build a $1.7 billion new hospital on Cathedral Hill at Van Ness Avenue and Geary Boulevard.

However, Public health director, Dr. Mitch Katz, said the move would leave San Francisco General as the only acute care hospital in the south-east side of the city.

“I don’t believe a simple closure of St. Luke’s, and closure of the [emergency department] could enhance our health status, have” Katz said. “We only now have nine acute care hospitals in San Francisco and we very badly need all of our emergency departments.”

During the hearing, Supervisor Michela Alioto-Pier grilled Cal Pacifi c’s executives on rumors of sabotaging St. Luke’s numbers in order to justify the downgrading. She asked Willrich if CPMC was referring patients with private insurance to its other campuses and holding on to billing statements for its Medicare/ MediCal claims.

Willrich, however, categorically denied all accusations of engaging in the process known as, “medical redlining.”

“There’s no understanding that this is the way things are done,” Willrich said, “This doesn’t not sound like CPMC.”

Still, Alioto-Pier expressed her concerned on the impact the closure would have on the neighborhood, adding “You get rid of St. Luke’s and women who want to give birth to their babies in their communities all of a sudden have to go into Pacifi c Heights.”

Doctor’s from St. Luke’s, who treat high number of patients on government programs, also had their questions about the potential loss of the hospital. Michael Treece, chairman of the department of pediatrics at St. Luke’s has cared for children in the Mission District for over ten years. He noted that kids get sick at higher rates than adults and more serious conditions could develop into lifethreatening complications if not dealt with properly.

“Do we really want to ask families to bring their sick children all the way across town on a bus,” Treece asked. “Is that who we are?”

Thirty-three-year-old, Jan Zimmerman, who recently delivered her baby at St. Luke’s, said it should remain open as an example to the rest of the nation. ­She said that San Francisco should be home to hospitals that provide “the same opportunities and resources so that we have the best kind of healthcare available for everybody.”

The strong community reaction seemed to take stock with CPMC’s chief executive offi cer, Dr. Martin Brotman, who stayed for entire hearing lasted close to three hours. While he said he found the medical redlining accusations to be insulting, he thought the dialogue was constructive. “Everybody said we’re running a terrifi c hospital in there and they don’t want to lose it, that resonates,” Brotman said, “I heard what they’re saying and I’m going to reassess what the options are.”

Brotman said CPMC will continue to work with Dr. Katz and the city to determine the future of St. Luke’s and San Francisco’s medical system.

­