| by Gretchen Hildebran/PoorNewsNetwork I was confused as I sat in the back of the Board ofSupervisor's Chambers two weeks ago.  POOR Magazine
 editors had sent me to witness Gavin Newsom
 introducing his twenty-some-odd point plan to "solve"
 homelessness but all I could find in the SF Board Agenda were
 two insidious items about shopping carts and public
 toilets.  Then Supervisor Newsom got his turn on the
 microphone and his plan became clear.  Throughout his
 15 minute speech he moved like a synchronized swimmer
 performing his first solo routine, making himself
 larger and more competent with every word.
 Every hand gesture practiced and perfected, the
 dynamics of his voice became at each turn of policy
 appropriately passionate or concerned. While softening
 all the ideological justifications of his plan to
 further manage, exploit and police the homeless and
 the poor, his deeper strategy emerged.  All eyes were
 fixed on the tall and well-suited man, who knows that
 talking about getting rid of the homeless will
 guarantee you a sound bite on TV and keep downtown
 interests, ever hopeful about rising property values,
 watching your back and calling you "mayor material."
 When Newsom was done grandstanding, it took severalminutes to recover and review my notes.  By then the
 new golden boy of the Democratic Machine was outside
 the Chambers, surrounded by a semi-circle of fawning
 reporters and TV cameras.  I elbowed myself half-way
 in to the scene, hoping to catch a few of KRON's
 hard-hitting questions.  These appeared to be in short
 supply as reporters nodded to Newsom's explanation
 that he found it ìmean-spirited to watch people
 suffer.î
 Back in October, this same kind-hearted politicianvoted down the 24-hour notice legislation.  That law
 would have required the police to notify homeless
 people that their possessions would be seized, giving
 them time to salvage precious items such as ID,
 medicine and clothes.  Newsom spoke out against the
 legislation and orchestrated its failure.  I jumped
 into a gap between the smiles to ask him why.
 Suddenly a large finger was pointed in my direction.
 Sternly the Supervisor protested, "I have been a
 champion on services and SRO reform!"  A wild glimmer
 appeared in his eye and his finger waved at me again,
 No need to resort to name calling, he said.  I waved
 my hands in confusion and backed out of the crowd.  I
 had expected defensiveness, maybe a slippery
 explanation, but not a counter attack.  For a couple
 of seconds I wondered what explicative had slipped out
 of my mouth by accident.  But no such slip of the
 tongue had occurred.  I had merely pointed out a
 contradiction between the politician's stated
 compassion and his consistent actions against basic
 property rights of homeless folks.  I was guilty only
 of lightly scratching the surface of the slick new
 paint job that Newsom is getting in preparation to
 look and act like a contender in the 2003 mayor race.
 When the new Board of Supervisors was elected in late
 2000, Gavin Newsom was one of a few Brown-aligned
 incumbents to hold onto his seat.  His lasting power
 may be related to the fact that he ran uncontended in
 District 2, which covers the Marina and Pacific
 Heights and is home to the cityís richest and whitest
 populations.  He was originally appointed in 1997 by
 Mayor Brown to the Board of Supervisors seat vacated
 by State Assemblyman Kevin Shelley.  At the time,
 Newsom was little more than a local rich boy with a
 poly-sci degree from Santa Clara University.  His
 status as the owner of a Napa vineyard and Marina wine
 shop inspired glee among the business community.  The
 Chronicle splayed the headline, SF's New Supervisor
 Bold, Young Entrepreneur.
 What didn't get as much attention was the system ofpolitical patronage which garnered Newsom this
 appointment.  His father, William A. Newsom, was a
 California Appeals Court Judge and is a close friend
 and advisor to the likes of John Burton and
 billionaire Gordon Getty.  In political terms,
 Supervisor Newsomís appointment secured Willie Brownís
 connection to these families and kept the Board of
 Supervisors stocked with cronies who would not
 challenge his pro-business, pro-development brand of
 machine politics.
 Newsom is highly defensive about his privilegedbackground, and insisted in an profile in the SF
 Sentinel that he is basically a normal guy: ìUntil
 about five years ago, Iíve never made more than
 $22,000 in my life.î  While that figure may show up on
 his tax return, there is no doubt that Newsom reaps
 the rewards of the company he keeps.  Gordon Gettyís
 son William, (known in society columns as Billy) is a
 friend and partner in Plumpjack, a vineyard and chain
 of wineshops, restaurants and resorts.  Gavin and
 Billy make frequent investments together, such as the
 Pacific Heights house they sold during the boom years
 for about $4 million dollars.  The two also dominate
 society pages, typified by the media circus which
 surrounded Newsomís marriage to D.A. Kimberly
 Guilfoyle, which the Gettys hosted at their SF
 mansion.
 While the mainstream media delights in the whirlwindaffairs of the rich and powerful, they have also
 allowed Newsom to portray himself as a self-made man
 who will steer clear of Brownís party line.  In small
 ways Newsom earned this reputation.  One of his
 distinguishing stands on the Board was to work towards
 decriminalizing drug abuse.  He successfully promoted
 the OBOAT (Office Based Opiate Addiction Treatment)
 legislation which would allow private physicians to
 administer methadone to people trying to kick heroin
 or other opiates.
 This initiative was applauded by people suffering dueto lack of substance abuse treatment and the providers
 who work with them.  However, providers I spoke with
 felt that Newsom had aligned himself with the harm
 reduction movement for personal and political
 advantage.  This made him an unpredictable ally to
 those fighting against the War on Drugs.
 Longtime frontline health worker Rachel McClean found
 he aligned himself only with narrowly specific issues.
 She suspects that his motives are related to rumorsof family experiences with drug abuse rather than
 moral belief in a right to treatment.  "Office based
 methadone is great, we have worked for it for a long
 time.  But it definitely serves the interests of the
 rich junkies out there who want to be spared the
 indignity of going down to the methadone clinic."
 McClean recalls Newsom listening to testimony of
 addicts in City Hall and benevolently offering them
 help.  "It makes him look O.K. to all the folks in the
 city who are against the war on drugs, who believe in
 decriminalization."  But this one isolated program
 doesn't go very deep she concluded, adding, "The war
 on drugs is really a war against poor people and he
 couldnít care less about that."
 Which brings us back to Newsom's many-pointed plan andhis claim to be promoting it out of compassion.  Much
 popularized in the Chronicle, Examiner, and even
 scoring a story in the New York Times, Newsom's office
 released a Policy Advisory Update on January 7th
 which claims to work towards a comprehensive
 solution to homelessness.  The catch phrase "New York
 model" has repeatedly appeared in coverage of his plan
 due to the fact that many of the most controversial
 points of Newsom's are drawn from Guiliani policies in
 New York.
 When promoting the centralized intake process andfingerprinting of homeless people, Newsom called these
 "the best practices from other cities."   He also
 borrowed directly from the ideology behind the New
 York model when he stated, "This is not a housing
 problem, this is a substance abuse and mental health
 problem."
 The popularity of this ideology and its re-emergencein the rhetoric of Willie Brownís wanna-be heir is no
 accident.  This same philosophy is the lynchpin in the
 "Ready, Willing and Able" program that has grown into
 the "success story" of New York's homeless services.
 The program's website details how its founder, George
 McDonald, lived in an SRO for years in order to prove
 that it could be done, that people could work at
 minimum wage, live in SROs and make it.    That is,
 make it without government assistance, without a
 meaningful living wage job, and without addressing the
 root causes of homelessness, especially the endemic
 lack of affordable housing.
 Instead, the Ready Willing and Able program is workoriented.  Their slogan, ìwork works, is the
 rhetorical answer to the question what do we do with
 all the homeless?î  Put them in shelters and require
 their labor 40 hours a week at minimum wage.  The
 program acts as their employers and can lease the
 workforce out at cut rates for services such as street
 cleaning, bulk mailings, housing maintenance and more.
 Success in the program means that you stay sober(checked with regular drug testing), hand over $65 a
 week for room and board from your paycheck and give up
 ìentitlementsî such as General Assistance.  It also
 means that you must remain a docile and compliant
 worker in order to receive shelter and treatment.
 Chance Martin of the Coalition on Homelessness
 commented, ìThis program commodifies homeless people.
 There is no investment in the individual, it is only
 about filling a certain number of slots to make your
 numbers work.î
 The RW&A website now boasts of a ìworkforce of 800îwhich it gladly offers up to any corporation at the
 lowest prices around.  Companies such as Toyota,
 Citibank and Canon contract with the programís labor.
 Graduates of the program often continue to work for
 many of the companies who donate to or whose officers
 sit on the board of the Doe Fund, the parent funder of
 the program.
 As was reported last week in the Bay Guardian, theCalifornia-based property management giant CB Richard
 Ellis has taken time to promote Ready Willing and Able
 as a ìsolutionî right here in San Francisco. Bringing
 the program into the cityís range of services was a
 hot topic at luncheons between Willie Brown, George
 Smith (Head of the Department of Homelessness), Newsom
 and CBRE reps. The companyís interest may lie in
 raising property values but they may also feel
 inspired by the thought of a cut-rate workforce
 available for maintenance contracts on their
 widespread holdings in San Francisco.  Whatever the
 motivation, it shouldnít escape notice that in 2001 CB
 Richard Ellis was bought out by a private group of
 investors known as the Blum Capital Partners, headed
 most insidiously by Richard Blum, Senator Dianne
 Feinsteinís husband.
 The power luncheons with a corporate agenda putNewsomís plan into context.  Homelessness is a popular
 ìhot-button issue, that Newsom can use to develop his
 leadership profile while serving the interests of the
 powerful political leaders who are now grooming him
 for a mayoral run.  Newsom isnít the regular guy he
 wants us to think he is, and he clearly isnít separate
 from the machine politics that dominates the Bay Area
 and beyond.
 Jenny Freidenbach, also of the Coalition OnHomelessness, was standing behind the circle of
 reporters as Newsom blurted sound bites at City Hall.
 She wasnít impressed.  ìHeís not talking about
 housing, treatment or living wage jobs, only more
 bureaucracy,î was her explanation of why the C.O.H.
 wasnít receptive to Newsomís plan. He worked with no
 service providers in forming the plan and again has
 followed the "New York model" and Willie Brown's lead
 in blaming providers and advocates like the C.O.H. for
 protecting the rights and dignity of homeless people.
 Newsomís homeless policy is inspired by a stingy
 political climate and motivated by personal ambition.
 The Supervisor has tried to convince more than one
 homeless person or advocate that his heart is in the
 right place.  Freidenbach reported that back in 1998
 when the Board of Supervisors voted on whether to cut
 G.A. benefits, a man named Garth testified on the
 devastating effects of having his monthly check cut to
 even less.  Although Newsom voted in favor of cutting
 the benefit, he approached Garth after the hearing and
 apologized.
 These kinds of gestures only further indicate thatNewsom is aware of the people he is stepping on to get
 ahead.  Said Freidenbach, "He knows what he's doing is
 wrong, but he does it anyway because he always stays
 true to his constituency."
 
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