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How Do You Want to Die? Write It Down.

By Joann Mar, KALW/Crosscurrents
Most Americans are unprepared for the worst to happen — an accident or an unexpected illness that leaves them brain dead, but still alive. That’s what happened to Terri Schiavo, a young woman who became comatose after suffering a heart attack in 1990. Schiavo was kept alive by a feeding tube for 15 years. During that time, her husband tried to withdraw the feeding tube, but was adamantly opposed by Schiavo’s parents, Congress and President George W. Bush. After a highly publicized legal battle, the feeding tube was finally removed and Schiavo died two weeks later.

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Latino Businesses Struggle to Get Funding to Grow, Survey Says

By Farida Jhabvala Romero, KQED News Fix/The California Report
Half of Latino entrepreneurs rely on personal capital only — including credit card debt — to start and expand their businesses, which limits their success as well as growth opportunities for the U.S. economy. That’s according to a new survey of 4,900 Latino-owned businesses across the country by the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Latinos start enterprises at a faster rate than other groups in the country but struggle to grow those businesses, according to U.S. Census figures the researchers cite. The more than 3.3 million firms owned by Latinos nationwide made $150,000 in annual sales on average, one-quarter of what non-Latino firms made in 2012. Read the complete story at KQED News Fix/The California Report

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No Ignoremos los Derechos Civiles del Área de la Bahía

NOTE: This is a Spanish translation of our letter from the editors: Don’t Take Civil Rights for Granted. It is also available in Chinese and Arabic.
Hoy más que nunca es importante estar alerta para evidenciar las amenazas contra la libertad de expresión, las oportunidades educativas y demás valores propios de San Francisco
¿Educación o deportación? » Read more

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勿視灣༐民權 為理ᡤ當然

NOTE: This is a Chinese translation of our letter from the editors: Don’t Take Civil Rights for Granted. It is also available in Spanish and Arabic.
 
勿視灣區民權
為理所當然
 
為了揭露言論自由、教育機會和舊金山其他
價值觀面臨的威脅,提高警覺性要比以往任何時候都更重要
 
 
教育還是遣返?
這是一個我們正在積極抗爭的駭人問題,因為在2016年大選結果出爐後,舊金山已經淪為美國政治局外人。基於對這種分歧現象有迫切記錄的需要,身為獨立地方新聞工作者,我們的工作變得比以往更加重要。
延續自今年夏季開始的教育議題,本期的封面故事將報導更多新的相關資訊。無論是合法移民或無證移民,現在都逐漸被美國國家領導人妖魔化。如果川普貫徹其遣返大多數無證移民的主張,舊金山公立學校對新移民或本地出生公民推展的雙語教育成果,可能會被完全抹殺。根據統計,加州目前有230萬名無證移民,其中4萬4000人住在舊金山。
在剛進入12月的此時,讓我們做一個有根據的猜測,那就是川普入主白宮後,大選時期出現的種族歧視、排外主義和恐懼還會繼續存在。這些現象不僅與加州深具包容性和進步的觀念背道而馳,更威脅要進行破壞。家長們因此害怕被異族化、成為移民調查的對象,或被攻擊詆毀。
舊金山創新的多語言沉浸式教育,為所有學生提供豐富的學術知識和文化資訊。如果家長擔心子女參加雙語教育的就學紀錄,會被聯邦官員拿來當做遣返他們的理由,他們有可能放棄讓子女接受雙語教育的機會。如此一來,本地學校董事會實驗和資助雙語教育的能力可能會被削弱。
這不過是移民受到刁難時,地方政府可能遇到的問題之一,但它的嚴重性已經遠超過社區是否有權聲稱自己是「庇護城市」(拒絕讓警方執行聯邦移民法的城市)造成的衝突。
然而,這並不是舊金山價值觀遭受到的唯一衝擊。川普已誓言減少社會服務項目、取消環保措施、將公立教育私有化。他還表示,將挑戰加州選民支持的民權保護法,包括宗教自由、同性婚姻、平權措施、正當司法程序等。此外,我們可能必須重新檢視對聯邦福利的認知,例如醫療保險、社會安全福利和貧富家庭相對稅金負擔。
Public Press成立七年以來,探討過住房、環境、健康、勞工、政治、教育等諸多議題,聯邦政策只偶爾提及。我們過去一直以為,地方政府領導者無論如何,最終都會對社區的福祉負起應有的責任。現在不再是如此。
Public Press承諾,將從社區福祉的角度,負起監督新政府的責任。我們不是唯一與這些挑戰抗爭的城市,這次大選已經引發全國媒體對充滿哲學意味的「客觀性」一詞進行探討。在新政治時代中,如果太重視這個詞彙字面上的意義,會與我們一向珍視的原則,如言論自由、法治、民眾知的權力、民主進程本身有所衝突。
新聞界現在正在扼腕內省,他們對這個衝動型強人的報導或容忍,是否是將他送進華盛頓的主因。川普已經揚言要對冒犯他的記者提告、封鎖政府資源和公共紀錄管道、打跨質疑其政策的媒體,並鎮壓抗議行動。
無黨無派是Public Press一向秉持的立場,也是希望能繼續堅持的理念。但國家政治的變化,使我們檢視出本身存在的偏見。在此,我們要自豪地表示,我們擁抱「與民眾站在同一陣線」的偏見,一個提倡言論自由、正確性、問責制、公平性與真實性的偏見。
新聞工作的責任不僅是報導事實(即使大部份的事實都讓人難以接受),同時還要推動解決社區共同問題的對話。未來一年,我們將繼續對當權者提問,為沒有發言管道的弱勢民眾發聲。也許我們面對的挑戰十分艱巨,也許很多人會因為衝突受到傷害,但增強民眾參與政治與公共生活的實力,已經比以往任何時候都更迫切需要。
國家和地方政策不可分割,現在更需要靠地方新聞工作者揭露各種問題和衝突、記錄社會和經濟的改變、擴大決策者考慮的視野。
但是,這還不夠。由於反對第一修正案的行政當局權力不斷提升,新聞界有責任大聲指出權力濫用的問題,和任何暗藏專制傾向的行動。身為地方新聞工作者,我們必須隨時保持警覺,以保護公眾知的權利,即便要我們公然反抗權力體制。
 
編輯部敬上

Editor Roy Takeno reading a copy of the Manzanar Free Press in front of the newspaper office at the Manzanar War Relocation Center in the Owens Valley, California, in 1943. » Read more

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لا تتخذ الحقوق المدنية لمنطقة الخليج من المسَلمَات

NOTE: This is an Arabic translation of our letter from the editors: Don’t Take Civil Rights for Granted. It is also available in Spanish and Chinese.
يعد الاحت ا رس أكثر أهمية من اي وقت مضى للوقوف على تهديدات
حرية التعبير، فرص التعليم ، والقيم الأخرى لمدينة سان ف ا رنسيسك
يعد الاحت ا رس أكثر أهمية من اي وقت مضى للوقوف على تهديدات
حرية التعبير، فرص التعليم ، والقيم الأخرى لمدينة سان ف ا رنسيسكو
التعليم ام الترحيل ؟
لعل هذا هو السؤال المحير الذي نواجهه لما تعانى منه سان ف ا رنسسكو من انح ا رف سياسى في أعقاب انتخابات عام
2016 ، حيث يجعل مهمتنا كصحفيين مستقلين ومحليين من خلال توثيق الإختلافات أكثر إلحاحا وأهمية من ذي قبل. » Read more

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Chinese Company’s Plan for Bike Sharing in San Francisco Faces Pushback

By Bryan Goebel, KQED News Fix
What could go wrong with a tech company’s plan to place hundreds or perhaps thousands of shared bikes around San Francisco, the nation’s second-most-bike-friendly city? China-based Bluegogo, which has reportedly scooped up $34 million in start-up funds, appears ready to begin deploying its blue aluminum bikes in popular neighborhoods around San Francisco. 
Read the complete story at KQED News Fix.

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Merchants on 24th Street Feel Displacement Pressures, Mull Over Protections

By Laura Wenus, Mission Local
Merchants along the 24th Street corridor where a new proposal seeks to protect them feel the city’s affordability crisis just as strongly as tenants fear displacement, but their views on how to remedy it are as varied as their wares. District 9 Supervisor Hillary Ronen’s first proposed legislation offered a trio of land-use based protections for businesses on 24th Street that were developed in a yearlong collaboration between the city and community-based organizations on the 24th Street corridor. Read the complete story at Mission Local.  

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As Medicine Prolongs Our Lives, There’s a Shortage of Doctors Who Help Us Die

By News Producer, KALW/Crosscurrents
The average life span has nearly doubled during the last century. But although people are living longer, they’re now facing health challenges that were less prevalent before—severe chronic illness, cancer, lung disease, dementia and Alzheimer’s—debilitating conditions that often cause great pain and suffering. For many people nearing the end of their lives, palliative care—relief from pain and suffering—is not readily available.  
Read the complete story at KALW/Crosscurrents.

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With Obamacare Facing Repeal, Supervisors Consider Bolstering S.F. Health Program

Anticipating the worst, San Francisco officials are laying groundwork for dealing with the incoming Trump administration.
The Board of Supervisors has created a Federal Select Committee, charged with strategizing the city’s defense against any threatening federal policies. Supervisor Malia Cohen will chair that committee, along with the Budget and Finance Committee. » Read more