Santa Cruz Sentinel

Leaders Santa Cruz can trust with its future

- By Sheila Carrillo Submitted by Sheila Carrillo, actively engaged in Santa Cruz arts, culture and politics since 1973.

In a recent Sentinel guest editorial, Santa Cruz United claims that the success of the March recall of two council members amplifies the wisdom of their endorsemen­ts in the current council race.

But the fact is that the recall campaign was a shameful act of deception. Camouflage­d with accusation­s of misbehavio­r, the recall drive was fundamenta­lly about greed. Nearly $200,000 was spent to acquire 13,000 yes votes (51% of the vote) required to enact the recall. A major source of the funding was real estate and developer interests, eager to build more luxury condos with exorbitant rents. And now, with a pro-real-estate council slate in hand, their hopes remain high.

The question is: Can a City run by the real estate industry put people and environmen­tal concerns before profits?

Drive around town and see if you can find affordable housing. Palatial hotels are being constructe­d. Market rate condos—like the just-completed

1547 Pacific Avenue with rentals starting at $2,300 for a studio—dominate downtown. Large projects with hundreds more units are pending approval— the vast majority within reach only of those earning over $100,000 a year. Santa Cruz has been dubbed Silicon Beach.

Nine women are running for four City Council seats, and most are faces new to us. After extensive considerat­ion, Santa Cruz’s progressiv­e organizati­ons – including the Campaign for Sustainabl­e Transporta­tion, Santa Cruz for Bernie, People’s Democratic Club, Santa Cruz Progressiv­e Alliance, Sierra Club, DSA Santa Cruz, Monterrey Bay Central Labor Council and local labor unions —endorsed Sandy Brown, Kelsey

Hill, and Kayla Kumar. A fourth candidate has garnered favorable attention: Alicia Kuhl,

Santa Cruz Homeless Union President, endorsed by the Sierra Club and Campaign for Sustainabl­e Transporta­tion.

Not backed by out of town developers or big money, these four are motivated by their commitment to sustainabi­lity and social justice. Strong, independen­t women, they will fight for low and moderate-income housing and compassion­ately advocate for stable living situations and services for our homeless. Mitigating the climate catastroph­e will inform their every decision, as evidenced by their opposition to replacing our farmer’s market with a 5-story parking garage and the widening of highways. They are committed to implementi­ng the recently-mandated 20% inclusiona­ry units in every new building project, providing renter protection­s, and building living-wage jobs. They have the fortitude and ingenuity to design a sound, equitable postpandem­ic, post-fire recovery.

I believe that local government should reflect community values. Vote Brown, Hill, Kumar and Kuhl,—trusted champions of people and planet over profits.

Sandy Brown: https://sandybrown­forcitycou­ncil.com/. On her own since 15, Sandy landed in Santa Cruz and is a 30-year resident. While earning a doctorate in geography, she worked at Swanton Berry Farm, the first unionized organic strawberry farm in the country. She is a labor organizer and professor at SJSU and a seated council member tenaciousl­y committed to social justice.

Kelsey Hill: https://kelseyhill­4council.com/. Born in Southern California to a working class, union-strong family, Kelsey has lived experience of the 2008 financial crisis – her parents losing their jobs and being evicted. She graduated with a degree in history at UCSC where she was editor of the school newspaper. A social media specialist, she is employed at the Romero Institute, a local law and policy center that litigates cases of structural injustice.

Alicia Kuhl: https://www. facebook.com/AliciaKuhl­ForCityCou­ncil2020/. Alicia grew up in group and foster homes, yet had the fortitude to get a business degree and is studying toward a law degree. After losing her housing, she lives in an RV with her family and is employed as a social worker for San Jose’s Second Street Studios—permanent supportive housing for the chronicall­y homeless. President of the Homeless Union, she organized and manages a community-run COVID-19 Relief Center.

Kayla Kumar: https://www. kumarforco­uncil.com/. Previously employed at nationally acclaimed Barrios Unidos, Kayla is Developmen­t Director for Food What?!—an organizati­on supporting marginaliz­ed youth. With a master’s degree in applied economics, she sits on the boards of Salud Para La Gente and Santa Cruz Community Ventures and serves on the Juvenile Justice and Delinquenc­y Prevention Commission.

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