Submit Your District 7 Nomination for the 7th Annual NEN Awards Today

The NEN Awards are an annual tradition that brings the neighborhoods together to celebrate the people and organizations that make our communities great.  The nominations window for the 7th Annual NEN Awards is now open and it’d be great to get as many of our District 7 heroes into the running for a NEN Award.  So please take a moment and nominate your pick at the site below (a complete list of categories to choose from is on the home page).

http://empowersf.org/nenawards/ 

The nomination window closes at 5pm on Friday, November 21st – so don’t delay – submit your nominations today!

Sunnyside Playground Gets Free Wifi

Originally printed from The Examiner

http://www.sfexaminer.com/sanfrancisco/san-francisco-officially-launches-free-wireless-service-in-32-public-spaces/Content?oid=2907857

San Francisco officially launches free wireless service in 32 public spaces
By Joshua Sabatini

Supervisor Mark Farrell’s free Wi-Fi program — which makes wireless Internet service available at 32 parks, plazas and open spaces across San Francisco — will begin today.

San Francisco is officially rolling out free Wi-Fi service in 32 public parks and recreation centers today, in a step toward a larger vision of making Internet service for residents a right and not a luxury.

Funded through a $600,000 gift from Google to The City last year, the Department of Technology spent the past year installing and testing the networks that city officials say are ready for prime time.

As of Tuesday, the average baseline performance at the public spaces was 10-15 megabits per second download and 7-10 Mbps upload. However, The City did say some locations are seeing download speeds as high as 30 Mbps.

The network is being monitored around the clock for performance issues.

Public spaces with free Wi-Fi

1. ALAMO SQUARE

2. BALBOA PARK

3. BERNAL HEIGHTS RECREATION CENTER

4. BOEDDEKER PARK

5. CHINESE RECREATION CENTER

6. CIVIC CENTER PLAZA

7. CORONA HEIGHTS

8. CROCKER AMAZON PLAYGROUND

9. DUBOCE PARK

10. EUREKA VALLEY REC CENTER

11. GENE FRIEND REC CENTER/SOMA

12. HAMILTON REC CENTER

13. HUNTINGTON PARK

14. JOSEPH LEE RECREATION CENTER

15. JUSTIN HERMAN PLAZA

16. MARGARET HAYWARD

17. MARINA GREEN

18. MINNIE & LOVIE WARD REC CENTER

19. MISSION DOLORES PARK

20. MISSION REC CENTER

21. PALEGA RECREATION CENTER

22. PORTSMOUTH SQUARE

23. RICHMOND RECREATION CENTER

24. ST MARY’S PLAYGROUND

25. ST MARY’S SQUARE

26. SUE BIERMAN PARK

27. SUNNYSIDE PLAYGROUND

28. SUNSET PLAYGROUND

29. TENDERLOIN CHILDREN’S REC CENTER

30. UNION SQUARE

31. UPPER NOE RECREATION CENTER

32. WASHINGTON SQUARE

** MISSION DOLORES PARK and BOEDDEKER PARK are currently under construction, Wi-Fi installation at these locations will resume once construction is complete.

Source: Board of Supervisors

Sunnyside Halloween Block Party – Volunteers Needed!!

SNA Halloween

 

Sunnyside Neighborhood Association, in coordination with Sunnyside Elementary and St. Finn Barr will be hosting a Halloween Street Party.

Sunday, October 26 from 1 – 4 pm.

The location will be on Edna Street, between Flood Ave and Hearst, and in the Community Room at St. Finn Barr.

There will be a haunted house, pumpkin painting, face painting, games, costume contest, goody bags, music, food, raffles and much more! Cost is $3 per child. Cost includes access to all food and activities.

We will need assistance to make this a success. If you are interested in volunteering to build a spooky haunted house, assist with any of the activities, please email

info@sunnysideassociation.org

We will need as many volunteers as we can get, so please consider volunteering. We will need assistance setting up, hosting and taking down.

Private exhibit of Eva Zeisel designs

Hello, friends of Eva Zeisel,

At last I’ve been able to set a date for the promised small, private exhibit of Eva Zeisel designs, to be held in our home. It will be on Saturday, October 18, at 1:00. Those of you who attended the reading in Glen Park, who have bought the book, are mid-century modern fans, or who are otherwise indicated an interest in Eva’s designs are all included. We have about 50-60 examples of her designs at home; a small fraction of the total collection, but still a larger selection of her art than has been included in other exhibits to which we have contributed!

I will have a few copies of the book for sale at the author’s price of $35, as well as some duplicate pieces from our collection that we are eager to sell, and hence have marked at ridiculously low prices. These will simply be on a “gift store” table, in the event you’re interested in acquiring an Eva piece — but no mention will be made of them once you are here.

You can preview most of these pieces at e-zeiselmostly.com, if you are interested. We’re getting out of the Eva business now, except as emeritus consultants.
RSVPs are ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL, since space is quite limited. I hope to hear from you soonest, and do hope to see you.
Hugs,
Pat

Pat Moore
415-587-8083

Looking for new energy in neighborhood activism

Published from the San Francisco Examiner

September 28, 2014

http://www.sfexaminer.com/sanfrancisco/looking-for-new-energy-in-neighborhood-activism/Content?oid=2907438

By Joel P. Engardio
Jack Barry (left) and Jeremy Friedlander want to reimagine the role of neighborhood associations in local politics.

My favorite Muppets are Statler and Waldorf, the cantankerous yet lovable old men shouting wisecracks and hard truths from the balcony. I get to see them regularly because I go to a lot of neighborhood meetings in San Francisco, where there’s never a lack of Statlers and Waldorfs in the audience.

Consider the Sunset Heights Association of Responsible People (SHARP). At first glance, its crowd and cadence resemble the typical neighborhood gathering hell bent on fighting City Hall.

“We’re mostly an older group, over 60,” said board member Jeremy Friedlander, 64. “We remember some pretty lunatic city proposals in the past, like a freeway in Golden Gate Park, which explains why old timers are skeptical about or hostile to city development plans.”

But something different is stirring at SHARP in the Inner Sunset.

“The other day a 20-something guy showed up with a mohawk — or at least what I thought was one — and we swooned over him,” Friedlander said. “You will not find a hip demographic at SHARP, though I’d love it if we could change that.”

Recently retired as a deputy attorney general for the state, Friedlander wants to re-imagine the purpose of the neighborhood association. He envisions a “salon,” where ideas are discussed rather than ideologies debated.

When SHARP hosted speakers on the affordable housing crisis, the controversial topic didn’t generate the typical fireworks.

“Instead of a shouting match, I asked each side to give a TED talk,” Friedlander said. “People need information, not another community boxing ring.”

Friedlander also wants to expand programming beyond politics with meetings that feature a local musician giving a concert or a scientist in the neighborhood presenting her latest research.

He hopes the quality of the programming will attract audiences with the time to physically attend, while technology can let anyone experience it online at any time (www.sharpsf.com).

“Trying to turn out lots of people to monthly meetings doesn’t work in an age of Facebook, smart phones and jobs with irregular hours,” Friedlander said. “The traditional model of the neighborhood group acting as a squeaky wheel to influence politics is becoming obsolete.”

SHARP has been around for more than a century. Its name comes from a regrettable period of San Francisco history when Westside neighborhoods were designed to keep non-white residents out.

“Back then an association of ‘responsible people’ was probably a respectable way to say ‘racist people,'” Friedlander said. “Today our name is merely ridiculous.”

SHARP has long since redeemed its origins. The group aims to be a philanthropic force — especially for at-risk kids — and has found a way to generate revenue.

Until 2008, SHARP occupied a rundown building it owned on two lots near the corner of Ninth Ave. and Moraga. One lot was sold and the old building was demolished to construct two rental apartments with a community room on the ground floor.

“Thanks to the rental income, we will be a bigger philanthropist organization with every passing year as our mortgage dwindles,” said longtime member Jack Barry, who was instrumental in realizing the group’s vision. “Like the old song goes, ‘If you don’t have a dream, how you gonna have a dream come true?'”

The call to change can be infectious. I spoke at SHARP about my views on city issues. Someone asked me about the influx of tech workers and I hesitated, expecting the older crowd to bristle at my answer. I said tech should be embraced, not feared.

Then, as if on cue, a gray-haired man of 70, perhaps 80 — a Statler from the Muppet balcony — barked his commentary for all to hear.

“It’s the future,” he said.

Joel Engardio lives west of Twin Peaks. Follow his blog at http://www.engardio.com. Email him at jengardio@sfexaminer.com.