SF parade volunteer as Sunnyside resident continues his long service

Long time Sunnyside resident David Tejeda is featured in the Bay Area Reporter highlighting  his long-serving volunteers in the Pride parade. He was recognized by Pride officials at the post-parade volunteer appreciation party two years ago as the organization’s longest surviving volunteer.

Thanks David for your service.

Original article: http://ebar.com/news/article.php?sec=news&article=69833

 

SF parade volunteer continues his long service

Published 06/26/2014

by Khaled Sayed

 
Look for longtime San Francisco Pride volunteer David Tejeda at the end of the route at this year’s parade.(Photo: Khaled Sayed)  

There are hundreds of volunteers that make the San Francisco LGBT Pride parade and festival a success. But one San Francisco gay man has been helping out for decades.

David Tejeda, a building contractor, is believed to be one of the longest-serving volunteers in the Pride parade. He was recognized by Pride officials at the post-parade volunteer appreciation party two years ago as the organization’s longest surviving volunteer, he said.

His first parade was 1976 and that year, according to the San Francisco LGBT Pride Celebration Committee website, the event started on Pine Street and made its way to Duboce Park.

Celebrating Pride Month has become a tradition all over the world. San Francisco’s Pride parade, called Gay Freedom Day back then, was one of the first that started an amazing tradition of celebrating LGBTQ culture, politics, and activism.

According to the Pride Committee, the city’s first Pride march was held June 28, 1970 to mark the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York City, which is generally viewed as the birth of the modern gay rights movement.

There was apparently no official event in 1971, but in 1972 a parade was held and in those days it ended on Polk Street.

Now San Francisco Pride is the largest event of its type in the U.S., according to the Wall Street Journal.

Tejeda, 66, has been volunteering for 31 years. He helped out off and on from 1976 to 1998, and since then has volunteered every year. In recent years he has been posted at the end of the parade route, at Market and 8th streets.

“It’s been said that the parade comes to me,” he quipped.

Marsha Levine, Pride board vice president and the longtime parade manager, confirmed that Tejeda has been with the Pride Committee for many years.

“He was an operations volunteer from 1998 to 2010,” Levine said. “In 2010 he transitioned to a safety volunteer and began assisting the parade team by working in the dispersal area at Eighth Street and Market.”

Tejeda has seen the parade route change and its size increase.

“I have watched the Parade go from one-half of Polk Street for a few blocks to the largest event of it type in the U.S,” he said

One of Tejeda’s fondest memories is shaking former Mayor Gavin Newsom’s hand, despite all the security protecting him.

Another memory Tejeda holds dear to his heart was last year when his nephew and his wife showed up and surprised him during the parade.

“They took a picture of me during a slow point, sitting in the middle of Market and 8th Street. They later told me they had a great time,” Tejeda said.

Tejeda has lived in lots of places, among them Munich, Germany; Puerto Rico; southern California; Seattle; and Okinawa, Japan.

“Then for college I moved to the Bay Area and eventually into San Francisco in 1976 – and never left,” he said.

Tejeda is married to Michael Gagne, who contributes to the community as the volunteer board president of Tenderloin Tessie, the nonprofit that provides holiday dinners to those in need.

One of the reasons Tejeda volunteers is to help make the world a better place for future generations.

“I also want to make sure younger gay generations don’t forget about the struggles that it took to get to where we are today,” Tejeda said. “That nobody handed our civil rights to us.”

Tejeda said he is thrilled to be part of Pride.

 

San Francisco Public Utilities Commission requests your assistance in water conservation

We are in a drought, and we need your help! In an effort to make water conservation convenient and accessible, the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC) recently launched an online application called “My Account” that allows customers to track water use and save money.

What is My Account? My Account is an online application that allows current water and sewer customers (active account holders) of the SFPUC to view their bills, payments, and water consumption usage online. This portal provides monthly and daily consumption data to assist customers with monitoring their water use, water and sewer bill costs. Voluntary water conservation will help San Francisco reach its goal of water usage reduction by 10%.

Automated Water Meters, which are in place throughout San Francisco, track customer’s daily water use. Customers can then access this information through My Account. In addition, customers can compare their water consumption with other San Francisco households of a similar size, track their own conservation progress, and save water and money.

Every gallon you save helps all of us!

To register, go to myaccount.sfwater.org.

conservation

SNA Greening and Weeding Day: Volunteers Needed, Saturday June 7, 9 am – 12 pm

Hi all Sunnyside greeners,
 
Our next clean up will again be on Circular Ave, with the help of the Green, Clean Team of Parks Alliance.
 
BUT, we really need neighborhood help as well. Our regular team is 4-5 people, and if we’re to keep Sunnyside safe, attractive, and clear of weeds and trash, we need MORE PEOPLE! Your hour or so of work makes a difference.
 
Saturday June 7th, 9am – 12 noon, meet at Circular and Congo: we’ll be working up Circular toward the freeway, and we aim to finish Circular. Grasses are easy, fennel & broom need chopping, ivy to be cut back. If you have them, bring favorite tools & gloves. Please help us! 
 
greensunnyside@gmail.com

Let’s Celebrate: Participatory Budgeting Results…I message from Supervisor Norman Yee

Dear Community Members:

Today, I am proud to announce the results of the District 7 Participatory Budgeting Process. Over 1,000 District 7 residents voted to decide on which improvements and projects we should fund to make our streets safer and our community more vibrant.

Overall, I think this was a tremendous success!  This process gave my staff and me the opportunity to hear from all of you about your ideas, your priorities, and your vision for District 7. I want to thank every single person who submitted a proposal, who attended a meeting or encouraged a neighbor to vote, and every resident who helped us think about the priorities that the Supervisor and the City need to address.

You — the people of District 7– selected 9 Projects in the Safety and Traffic category, 2 Projects in the Beautification category, 2 Projects in the Open Space Access and Improvement category and finally 2 Projects in the Community Services and Neighborhood Enhancementscategory. The winning projects are listed below in order of the number of votes received.

We look forward to working with all of you to make every project a reality and to continue advocating for more funding so that even the projects that weren’t selected will be prioritized.  As always, please feel free to reach out to our office if you have any questions or thoughts.

Kindest regards,

Norman Yee

GRANTEES SELECTED FOR THE SAFETY AND TRAFFIC CATEGORY

8. Make the crosswalk at O’Shaughnessy and Del Vale Safer (MTA) $20,000

7. Safety Study for Laguna Honda and Dewey Blvd (MTA) $20,000

4. Interactive speed limit sign for Clarendon School Zone (MTA) $20,000

2. Traffic Calming for 14th Ave (MTA) $20,000

9.Sunnyside Park Safe Access Study (MTA) $5,000

5. Interactive speed limit sign on Alemany Blvd (MTA) $20,000

1. Interactive speed limit sign on Panorama Drive (MTA) $20,000

6. Traffic Calming for Balboa Terrace (MTA) $15,000

3. Interactive speed limit sign on Olympia Way (MTA) $20,000

 

 

GRANTEES SELECTED FOR PROJECTS IN BEAUTIFICATION, OPEN SPACE ACCESS AND IMPROVEMENT, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND NEIGHBORHOOD ENHANCEMENTS

 

13. Better amenities for Golden Gate Heights Park (RPD) $23,000

20. A Pathway for a better West Portal (OEWD) $15,000

11. A Parklet for West Portal Ave (CPC) $15,000

12. A Makeover for Hoover Middle School (SFUSD) $25,000

18. Teen Summer Reader Scholarships (LIB) $10,000

10. A Makeover for Sunnyside Elementary (SFUSD) $12,000

 

 

Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi comments on City College of San Francisco

From the office of Nancy Pelosi:

Still Strong, Still Committed, Still City College
City College is an indispensable part of San Francisco – one of our most important ladders of opportunity. The education CCSF provides has enabled thousands of San Franciscans young and old to invest in themselves and build a better future for themselves and their families.

On Tuesday, the Department of Education responded to my inquiry about the veracity of public statements from the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (ACCJC). The Department of Education’s welcome response proves that ACCJC is able grant CCSF a good-cause extension of accreditation. For the ACCJC to refuse to allow good-cause extension – even after this clarification from the Department of Education, even after all the monumental progress City College has made along its Roadmap to Success – would be destructive, irresponsible, and could be viewed as a political act. For the livelihood of the students, the community, and the state, the ACCJC must send in a new evaluation team with a fresh set of eyes and allow a good-cause extension of accreditation, a team that can see the progress that CCSF has already made. CCSF is still strong, still committed, and still City College.

http://pelosi.house.gov