June 2006 SLCAN Candidate Questionaire
Responses from Michael J. Gregory,
candidate San
Leandro City Council District 1
SLCAN asked each of the candidates to complete
a questionnaire and were informed that their responses would be
posted on our web site. Candidates responded to the questionnaire
by electronic mail. Except for formatting, SLCAN has not modified
the candidate's responses.
A. Experience and History
1. How long have you lived in San Leandro?
20 years.
2. What is your current job and place of work, if any?
American Red Cross-Blood Services, Sr. Account Manager, 6230 Claremont
Ave. Oakland.
3. What community, professional and/or advocacy groups are you a
member of?
- League of Women Voters, Eden Area
- American Red Cross, Ala. County Leadership Council
- Association of American Blood Banks
- Lake Merritt Sailing Club
- East bay Bicycle Coalition
- Alameda County Hispanic and San Leandro Chambers of Commerce
4.
Are you a member of a political party and, if so, which one?
Democrat.
5. In a one sentence answer, why are you running for office?
I have raised my family here, want to help shape San Leandro's
future with vision and intelligence.
6. What are your relevant skills, experience, or education that
qualifies you?
I spearheaded a joint-use agreement between
the school district
and City of San Leandro. We received $1 million from the state
in Prop. 42 funds, an additional $300,000 from the city for
in-kind planning, engineering. I learned that I am effective
in finding common ground, can work with disparate community
groups. For the last 15 years my wife and I have concentrated
on San Leandro schools, serving as PTA/Dad's Club
presidents, site councils, bond and candidate campaigns.
B. Goals
8. What are your top 3 priorities and what resources/programs would
you advance to support them?
- a. Education. I plan to join the city/SLUSD liaison committee
if elected, help organize the next bond campaign, regularly visit
district schools to promote citizenship and community involvement.
- b. Budget.
Resource: city finance committee. The city has operated with a budget
deficit for too long. Measure I (business tax) is small relief as
is the recent waste fee hike. We need larger sources of revenue.
The marina has become a drain instead a delight.
- c. Affordable housing.
Resource: redevelopment, planning and zoning committees. Our children
can't afford to live where they have grown up. We need to allocate
market rate and low cost housing within each new development. Providing
for, attracting and retaining educators, healthcare workers and
first responders will enhance our safety and well being. We
need to find ways to attract and retain these vital community members.
9. Do you have any big ideas/visions for the future of the city?
Yes:
- a. The Marina. It needs to be sustainable as well as attractive.
If the Army Corps of Engineering funding does not materialize for
dredging we will need a ‘Plan B.' I'm not familiar with any other
plan than an attempt by the SL Chamber to set up a task force to
study the Marina aside from any city planning. I'm a life-long sailor,
would hate to see any marina close, but we're not in a position
to keep this afloat while draining city finances.What to do? How
about a destination-style convention center close to the Oakland
Airport, minutes away from San Francisco and San Jose/Silicon Valley?
I'm interested in studying a wetlands-based wastewater facility
similar to the one recently developed in Petaluma and Arcata; would
this fit into a Marina strategic plan?
- b. More joint use projects between
the city and SLUSD. Safe playing fields so that families don't have
to leave San Leandro for games and practice. A renovated aquatic
center at the high school. A performing arts center for the high
school or an agreement with local theaters.
- c. Senior center. The site
has been finalized, let's stay focused, get the job done.
C. Opportunities for Public Participation
10. How will you improve communications between residents and city
government and improve public participation in city government?
- a. Return phone calls, emails promptly.
- b. This is the $64,000 question/dilemma.
On the one hand we cannot
legislate love or caring about one's community. We can
try to make access friendlier, less intimidating. I believe
we need to start this process early on, reach out to the
schools, engage our youth in the democratic process. We
could try a pilot ‘youth civic engagement' program, create
a non-voting teen seat on the city council.
11. What would you do to improve the prompt availability of more
information (meeting minutes, etc.) on the city web site and other
places?
Free wi-fi and laptops for all would be ideal. How about pod or webcasting?
Many local city council meetings are filmed live on local cable channels.
12. What steps will you undertake to improve the transparency and
quality of decision making by the City of San Leandro?
I have participated in a ‘Brown Act' seminar hosted by the League
of Women's Voters. Quality decision
making: there is no substitute for studying the issues, participating
in committee-level meetings where city staff/management
can be engaged. Most of these committees are open
to the public. Quality government is not an oxymoron. Quality
improvement processes like Six Sigma and Lean Manufacturing
apply to government as well as business.
D. Campaigning
13. List your top five endorsements.
Alameda County Democratic Party
Alameda County
Central Labor
Alice Lai-Bitker
Sentinels
Bay East Realtors
14. List your top five (in dollar amount) sources of campaign contributions.
- myself ($2500 loan)
- Sentinels ($1500)
- RHO – PAC ($1000)
- Bay East Association of Realtors ($250)
15. How would you reform the way that campaigns are currently financed,
if at all?
Federal campaign finance reform would set the tone. I am still recovering
from last year's state excesses: $80 for one proposition (that failed!).
We continue to be barraged by well-financed negative ‘hit' pieces
designed to lower the bar and deflect from the issues.
16. What is your position regarding changing City Council member
elections from city-wide elections to district-wide elections?
I know that our current system is fairly unique. I can't comment
on this because I have not studied it yet (pro/con, financial analysis).
E. Schools
17. How will you promote collaboration between the city and public
schools?
With all of my heart. The city and chamber need to do their part,
accept responsibility for supporting our schools, become
part of the solution. The schools are ‘everybody's business.'
I plan to increase my involvement during my term, become
more familiar and accessible to SLUSD administrators
and trustees.
18. What opportunities do you see for joint use projects between
the city and schools?
(see 9b)
19. What do you see as the city's responsibility for impact of new
housing development on schools?
There is a direct connection
between any development and it's impact on city infrastructure
and schools. Meaning, the ‘impact' must equal some dollar
amount that can be negotiated prior to plan approval. The amount of developer
‘burn money' generally spent on individual campaigns would make
for an excellent starting point. Meaning, let's quit shortchanging
the city and schools, make this an equitable partnership.
20. What was your position on Measure A, the parcel tax for the San
Leandro Unified School District? How did you contribute towards the
campaign?
Yes. Contributions were financial and time spent phone banking and
walking precincts.
F. Positions
21. Briefly state your ideas on how to encourage and protect local
businesses development. What is your position on enacting limits on
chain businesses? What actions would you propose to accomplish your
vision?
Elected city officials need to be shameless promoters of buying
locally and attracting appropriate and desirable new business.
Limits on chain businesses? Starbucks. Let's talk. Each of the
city's business associations play a role in developing and marketing
themselves. I believe the city should cooperate to the
fullest extent promoting special events like ‘Sausage & Suds.'
22. What is your position on the establishment of a living wage ordinance?
YES
23. How would you ensure that community benefits are negotiated into
city contracts, development assisted by the city, or franchise monopolies
such as Comcast?
The operative word is negotiate. I'd like to review/research similar
contracts between these companies and other San Leandro-sized
communities before we even get to the table.Let's determine
what their track record is like, what their competitors/industry
typically offers.
Comcast: all
bets are off when dealing with monopolies. I'd keep an eye
out for alternative sources, attempt to consolidate with our neighbors
in order to attract competition. Or… negotiate
best possible terms.
24. Briefly state your position on the use of eminent domain.
Eminent domain: last resort when residences are involved.
25. What would you do in office to address poverty and homelessness
in San Leandro?
Long range: if we can turn the quality of our public education around,
we may be able to minimize this.
Short range:
review city contracts with Davis Street. Are they adequate,
can we get more help from the county and/or our supervisor?
26. What would you do to improve public transportation and make San
Leandro a more walkable city?
I served on the last 2 Bicycle and Pedestrian task forces. First
time around we created a plan that yielded Bancroft Ave. change to
a Class II bicycle-laned street (and
funding from state/local agencies). 2nd time we upgraded the
plan to include many targeted locations for pedestrian
upgrading/redesign. The city is prepared to apply for funding
to complete these plans. The plans are reviewed regularly.
Ride a bike, walk as often as you can! The city is ideally situated
(mostly flat) for human-powered transit. I am concerned
that AC Transit is closing many local routes or cutting
these back in favor of rapid transit.
27. How would you promote opportunities within San Leandro for historically-disadvantaged
populations/minorities?
The direct approach: ask and invite them. Talk to school principals
and church leaders for suggestions and leads.
28. What is your position on the EBMUD Heron Bay groundwater project?
None. I need to study this before I can comment.
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