Oxnard Club

…now browsing by tag

 
 

What do we want Oxnard to look like in the Future?

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Oxnard Planning Director, Chris Williamson, and Sierra Club Chair, Mike Stubblefield will discuss Oxnard’s proposed 2030 General Plan at GOOD CLUB on Wednesday March 10, 2010 at 7:00 PM.        

Some answers will be provided by Chris Williamson, who is the principal planner for the City of Oxnard and Mike Stubblefield, newly installed Chair of the Los Padres Chapter of the Sierra Club.  They will discuss the history, process, legal requirements and details of the proposed 2030 General Plan for the City of Oxnard, which was put on hold by the Oxnard City Council at the meeting of February 9. 2010. Mr. Williamson will reprise his presentation to the City Council on February 9.  Mr. Stubblefield will discuss the Sierra Club’s concerns about the General Plan.

In early February, hundreds of people sent letters to the Oxnard City Council, and several dozen testified during a standing-room only public hearing, to express their concerns about the 2030 General Plan’s  proposals for  Ormond Beach wetland area,  Jones Ranch, water supply, traffic, school placement,  industry, jobs and housing affordability issues .

 The City Council postponed a final decision on the 2030 General Plan pending more public outreach and discussion about the plan.

 The Greater Oxnard Organization of Democrats (the GOOD Club) meets at 7:00 p.m.  at the Café on A, 438 South A Street, in downtown Oxnard .  Visitors are welcome.  For further information call Carmen Ramirez at (805) 485-8026 or e mail inquiry at ramirezmcar@gmail.com .

Political Biography: Al Dirrim

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Al is the son of a Hoosier Republican farmer/teacher who damned FDR all the way to the bank to cash his AAA check, Al arrived on planet earth just before the crash of 1929 and, at only ten years old, he helped his family to weather the depression by working as a farm laborer. Near the end of WW II, he acquired a Railroad Retirement Board social security number by doing what his grandfather had done, working on the railroad. Jobs in bridge building, food service, insurance fraud investigations, and classroom teaching provided means for higher and higher education, as did a tour in naval intelligence during the Korean War. He completed his Ph.D. degree using the GI Bill, scholarships, and teaching positions to support the wife and family that came while he was attached to the Fifth Naval District command in Norfolk.

In 1959, degree in hand, he followed Horace Greeley’s advice to go west to join the faculty of San Fernando Valley State College, now CSUN, where he taught until his retirement in 1995. At Northridge he combined teaching, research, and textbook writing with activism in Democratic politics. He became president of the Northridge Democratic Club in 1963, an elector in the Electoral College in 1964, a regional officer in the CDC, and an intermittent delegate to the California State Democratic convention. His outspoken stand against escalation of the Vietnam War temporarily alienated him from mainstream politics and led to a long-term avocation in Renaissance and Baroque recorder music. Fully back in the swing of things by the 1980s, he combined political activism with political database building , maintaining the data base for the Nuclear Freeze in Southern California. He was also involved in many local and congressional elections in Los Angeles in the 1970s and 1980s.

In 1987 he became a commuter professor and (temporarily) absentee landlord, moving, with much political baggage, to Oxnard. GOOD Club officers quickly snagged him at the county fair, and he was appointed by Mayor Lopez to the Oxnard Public Library Board. Then it was the Ventura County Living Wage Coalition and CAUSE, the County Democratic Central Committee, and the California Clean Money Campaign. In the 1990s he served two terms as president of the GOOD Club. As a member of the Ventura Country Democratic Central Committee he worked on the executive board to provide inexpensive electronic voter data to clubs and candidates. In 2001 he was named Volunteer of the Year for Region 10 of the party for coordinating county voter registration. From 2004 to 2006 he served as precinct coordinator of the GOOD Club, receiving major recognition from labor, the party, and legislative bodies. Then, recovered from an illness, he again became president of the GOOD Club and resumed activity in the County Democratic Central Committee and the Fair Elections Campaign.

Behind this activism has been the conviction that the social contract that mitigated the economic collapse of the 1930s, the (con)federalist vision that U.S. provided the world and especially Europe at the end of WW II, and the domestic programs that treat all Americans as stake holders have been indispensable to our achievement of a “more perfect union,” domestic tranquility, and national security. Successful capitalism must provide incentives to more than a few winners who commandeer the rest. Our social fabric has been systematically undermined by the Friedmans and the Reagans whose deeds contradict their creeds.

Responsible parenthood and custody of our natural endowment are likewise indispensable perquisites for a rule of law that recognizes real persons, not corporate collectives, as participants in our polity. Activism is a commitment without end. Some dedicated band must fight for equity lest civilized society wither. As a professional historian, Al is all too aware of the historical record of imperial adventurers whose waste of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness constitute boundless marches of folly commonly celebrated as national epics.

Married for 28 years to Susan, Al has two sons and a grandson in Sacramento and a daughter in Oakland. Marriage added three stepsons and two granddaughters, who now reside in Palo Alto.

Allen Dirrim with editorial help from Dori Maria Jones.

GOOD CLUB ACTION ALERT

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

At the request of Carmen Ramirez

Now is a once in a Lifetime chance to save and fully restore, clean and protect the Ormond Beach Wetlands in Oxnard.  We Need Your Help to Rewrite the Map!   Let the Oxnard City Council  know that you want Ormond Beach protected!

For too long, the Oxnard Coast has been allowed to be abused and neglected.  Especially, the Ormond Beach wetland area, like many coastal wetlands, has been degraded and diminished by urban and industrial development – including the Halaco facility, which is now a Superfund site. Despite these impacts, the area is still considered a treasure by scientists and nature lovers. The California State Coastal Conservancy is also leading efforts to permanently protect and restore the wetlands. If successful, this could be one of the largest coastal wetland areas in Southern California. The Conservancy’s plan also envisions interpretive facilities, a trail network, boardwalks and wildlife overlooks, which would make Ormond Beach a amazing destination for residents and out of town visitors – a benefit to our entire community and our local economy.
 
However, a decision will be made on February 9 by the City of Oxnard about the Oxnard 2030 General Plan, and it could directly impact whether this restoration plan will be achieved. The 2030 General Plan describes Oxnard’s vision of what the City will look like through the year 2030. Unfortunately, Oxnard’s vision for Ormond Beach still includes significant industrial land use, including authorizing new industrial development on land still free from urban development. Industrial land use is incompatible with wetland protection, and the General Plan places it directly in the Conservancy’s wetland restoration planning area.
 
Your participation at this hearing is critical. If you can join us, please attend and let the City Council know the 2030 General Plan should not be adopted because:
 
       You support the State Coastal Conservancy’s efforts to acquire, permanently protect and restore Ormond Beach. The City should promote the Conservancy’s efforts at Ormond Beach and make any changes to the 2030 General Plan that conflict with the Conservancy’s preferred restoration plan (most recently identified as Alternative 2U in the Ormond Beach Wetland Restoration Feasibility Study), including changing to “resource protection” the Gateway Park area, the Halaco foundry site, the Reliant power plant, the Agromin site, and the area south of Hueneme Road between Edison and Arnold Roads.
 
      You support the current designation of the Halaco slag heap property as “resource protection.” The Halaco foundry site, which is still designated “industrial,” should also be designated “resource protection.” U.S. EPA will consider the 2030 General Plan when it makes its cleanup decisions for the Halaco site, and the City should send an clear message to EPA that it intends Ormond Beach to be free of polluting facilities that threaten human health and the environment.
 
     You support eliminating the residential development land use designations north of Hueneme Road. Residential development presents significant threats to wetland species. The land should remain designated “open space” to continue to buffer the Ormond Beach wetland area from urban impacts.

Oxnard 2030 General Plan Hearing
Oxnard City Council Chambers
305 W. Third Street, Oxnard
 Tuesday evening, February 9, 2010
7:00 PM 

If you cannot attend the hearing, please email the City Council members:
 
Mayor Tom Holden: drtomholden@aol.com
Mayor Pro Tem Andres Herrera: andres.herrera@ci.oxnard.ca.us
Council Member Dean Maulhardt: deancity@yahoo.com
Council Member Dr. Irene Pinkard: irene.pinkard@ci.oxnard.ca.us
Council Member Bryan MacDonald: bryan.macdonald@ci.oxnard.ca.us
 
Let them know that you care about the future of our city!

Ventura County Democratic Party Passes Ormond Beach Resolution With Unanimous Vote 1/26/2010

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

The Ventura County Democratic Central Committee passed the following Resolution last night by unanimous vote. The Committee is made up of a wide demographic including women, men, gay, straight, Hispanic, African American, Caucasian, all economic levels, young, and older members from every corner of Ventura County. This demonstrates the vast support for the preservation of environmental resources among Democrats throughout the county.

The full text of the Resolution passed is:

Resolution to Preserve, Protect and Restore the Ormond Beach Wetlands of Oxnard California
Author: Carmen Ramirez
Sponsor: Communications Committee
Date: 1/26/2010 revised

Whereas within the boundaries of the City of Oxnard lies a critical, unique and precious natural resource, the Ormond Beach Wetlands, a major stopover for migrating birds on the Pacific flyway and an irreplaceable habitat for other endangered species on a coastline that has been neglected, abused and subjected to toxic industrial pollution, yet remains a priceless cultural, aesthetic and natural heritage for all Californians, including future generations;

And whereas over 91% of California’s historic wetlands have been lost forever, while the Ormond Beach wetlands –  despite its proximity to the Halaco metal recycling plant, now an EPA Superfund site – still has a real chance to be fully restored and to thrive,

And whereas neither the City of Oxnard’s 2030 General Plan nor the Ormond Beach Specific Plan provides full protection to the surrounding land that’s necessary to buffer and protect the wetlands, in the likely event of sea level rise caused by climate change;

And whereas neither the City of Oxnard’s 2030 General Plan nor the Ormond Beach Specific Plan promotes the optimal and superior economic possibilities of new green jobs, eco-tourism, scientific study and education which could and should be promoted at Ormond Beach;

Be it therefore resolved that the Ventura County Democratic Central Committee officially supports the “resource protection” designation of all land in the Ormond Beach area of the 2030 General Plan land use map as the appropriate and “best practice” designation in order to protect and buffer coastal and wetland habitat and to promote Ormond Beach as an area for tourism, scientific study and education.

Be it further resolved that the Ventura County Democratic Central Committee officially supports the “resource protection” designation of all land covered by the Halaco slag heap property adjacent to Ormond Beach on the 2030 General Plan land use map, and supports and encourages the elected officials of the City of Oxnard to vote to change the designation of the Halaco smelter property to “resource protection” as well, instead of “industrial,” in order to effect the most protective clean-up of the location and ensure future land uses consistent with wetland and coastal habitat.

Be it further resolved that the Ventura County Democratic Central Committee supports the acquisition and restoration of the maximum wetland area and asks that the City of Oxnard’s 2030 General Plan and Ormond Beach Specific Plan facilitate the California State Coastal Conservancy’s preferred plan to acquire, permanently protect, and restore the maximum acreage of the Ormond Beach wetlands (Alternative 2U in the Conservancy’s October 2009 Feasibility Study).

DFA Campaign Training in Santa Barbara 2/20/2010

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

The DFA Campaign Academy mission is to focus, network, and train grassroots activists in the skills and strategies to take back our country, manage successful campaigns or run for office themselves.

Our Campaign Academy weekends are 16 hours of interactive workshops that bring hundreds of local activists, campaign staff and candidates together for 2 days of intensive campaign training. Experienced campaign professionals lead sessions in voter contact, fundraising, communications, on-line organizing and much more to empower progressive activists with the skills to win in November and beyond. Attendees also meet with dozens of local progressive candidates and learn about exciting job and volunteer opportunities in their area. And of course, everyone receives their own copy of DFA’s 180-page Campaign Training Manual.

Year after year, the DFA Campaign Academy is building a grassroots infrastructure of skilled progressive activists in all 50 states.

Event Date: Feb 20, 2010
Event Time: 9:00 AM PST (12:00 PM EST)
Venue Name: University of California Santa Barbara
Address: Gervetz Hall
City: Santa Barbara
State: CA
Zip Code: 93106
Website: http://www.democracyforamerica.com/events/33795-dfa-campaign-training-in-santa-barbara
Hosted by: DFA Campaign Academy Alumni, DFA Campaign Academy Alumni

Agenda:

Ten reasons to attend the DFA Campaign Academy training in Santa Barbara on February 20-21.

1. Learn how to plan and run a winning grassroots campaign
2. Meet and hear from local progressive candidates
3. Learn from trainers with decades of experience
4. Mingle with other local progressive activists at social events
5. Get a copy of our 180 page Grassroots Campaign Training Manual
6. Set goals and make plans to pass progressive legislation
7. Re-connect with old friends from the campaign
8. Help elect progressive candidates in 2010
9. Learn to organize your neighborhood or precinct
10. Look for a new job or volunteer opportunity

Click here to see what you will learn at a DFA campaign training.

Invite your friends on Facebook!

All we ask is a small contribution of $60 to DFA to help us cover our costs. Don’t worry if you can’t afford it, you can always find someone to sponsor you through our training scholarship fund and we offer reduced tuition rates to those in need.

Space is limited so reserve your seat today!

For more info on our trainers, curriculum, and history visit our training homepage at: www.democracyforamerica.com/training.

If you have questions you can email us at training(at)democracyforamerica.com or call our DFA Training hotline at: 802-651-3200 x191.

Click here if you have already registered and would like to pay your tuition fee.

Can’t make it to the training that weekend but still want to help? You can contribute to a scholarship fund for this training and help send a local organizer in your place.

Click here sponsor another attendee!

Camp Courage Central Coast: Sign up to participate in the Santa Barbara training January 30-31, 2010

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Inspired by the “Camp Obama” trainings that powered neighbor-to-neighbor organizing across America in 2008, Camp Courage is an intensive two-day training designed to teach the principles and skills of community organizing to activists working to restore marriage equality to California.

Drawing on techniques honed for decades by progressive social movements, Camp Courage teaches empowerment, team building, leadership development, and grassroots organizing skills. Camp Courage is designed primarily for new activists or those who have never engaged with the broader community about marriage equality as well as veteran LGBT activists and allies.

Camp Courage trainings have already been held in Los Angeles, Fresno, Oakland, Sacramento, D.C., San Diego and East LA. All seven events have received phenomenal reviews from participants, with evaluations averaging 9.06 (on a scale of 1 to 10).

To see highlights of the East Los Angeles training, watch the YouTube at http://www.couragecampaign.org/page/s/CampCentralCoast.

Camp Courage Central Coast will be an opportunity for activists and organizers to come together, recommit our energies and our talents to the marriage equality movement, and show the nation that we will not rest until all Californians are treated with the equality they deserve.

WHAT: Camp Courage, for marriage equality activists and organizers
WHERE: Santa Barbara (location provided once registration is confirmed)
WHEN: January 30-31, 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
SIGN UP: http://www.couragecampaign.org/page/s/CampCentralCoast

Camp Courage will cover basic community and political organizing skills, including:

* Finding your voice by telling your “story of self”
* Leadership development
* Principles of successful organizing
* Developing collaboration and building effective teams
* Techniques of voter persuasion
* Organizing a phonebank
* Canvassing
* Tabling
* Throwing house parties
* Online organizing

In addition to providing these essential tools Camp Courage provides a unique opportunity for community members to meet like-minded individuals.

A background in community organizing or an organizational affiliation is not a requirement to attend Camp Courage. The only requirements are energy, commitment, and a desire to broaden your leadership abilities.

Camp Courage is organized by our faculty Torie Osborn, Mike Bonin, and Lisa Powell. Osborn is a senior advisor to Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the United Way, and former executive director of the Liberty Hill Foundation and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. Bonin is a former regional field organizer for Obama for America, a veteran campaign staffer, and a community activist. Powell is an attorney, longtime trainer, community leader, and co-founder of United Lesbians of African Heritage.

Several amazing organizations will be represented at Camp Courage Central Coast, supporting the event or sending staff to participate or present, including CAUSE, COLOR Ventura, Equal Roots, FUND for Santa Barbara, Marriage Equality USA Santa Barbara & San Luis Obispo Chapters, McCune Foundation, Pacific Pride Foundation, San Luis Obispo Equality Team, Santa Barbara City College Queer & Ally Club, Stonewall Democrats of Ventura County, Strategic Alliance for Marriage Equality, UCSB Campus Democrats, UCSB Associated Students Queer Commission, UCSB Resource Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity, and the Ventura County Rainbow Alliance.

Our Central Coast training is one of many planned in 2010. If you are interested in our future trainings, please email CampCourage@couragecampaign.org.

If you have any questions, please email: CampCourage@CourageCampaign.org

From the GOOD Club Newsletter January 2010: WELCOME ABOARD MARIO

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

At the November 16, 2009, Executive Board Meeting, Mario Quintana, age 29, was invited to join the board as member-at-large. At the subsequent Executive Board meeting, December 14th, he was appointed the GOOD Club’s new Communications chair. “2010 is upon us and we must do all that we can to make a positive impact here in the city of Oxnard,” says Quintana.  “I am very excited and inspired to be a part of this organization.”
Mario’s commitment to his hometown was born of the challenges that he faced growing up in the projects of La Colonia. He recalls, how life in the projects was difficult and dangerous. The presence of gangs posed a threat to youngsters like Mario.  He saw their influence win over countless lives once filled with potential and possibility. With his mother’s encouragement, Mario focused his free time and energy on sports.  As a young boy, he played little league baseball, flag football, and basketball.  He concentrated on baseball in high school and college.  Today his passion is coaching little league baseball and flag football.  “I love to volunteer in my old neighborhood of Colonia,” he said.
Mario credits his mother for the positive choices he made. “I made it out of that neighborhood because of the values that my mother instilled in me,” he reflects.  Gloria Rivas Quintana, Mario’s mother, suffered kidney failure when Mario was just a toddler.  She spent the next twenty-five years going through endless hospital visits and medical procedures until—sadly— she passed away two years ago.
Mario graduated from Oxnard High School in 1998.  He went on to earn an A.A. degree in criminal justice from Ventura College and a B.A. degree in political science from CSU Northridge and is employed by AT&T.
The GOOD Club welcomes this dynamic young leader to our ranks.
Dori Maria Jones

A Seat at the Table

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

A sage old adage says, “If you don’t have a seat at the table, you may become part of the menu.” Today many Americans suffering economic losses from the global banking crisis certainly feel that Wall Street has been devouring Main Street. Ditto with respect to disastrous foreign policies that have digested our resources and youth in defiance of a public which seems not to have a seat at the table. Surveying some Obama appointments and the depth of deepening crises, some pundits have concluded that neither process can or will be stopped by the Obama administration.
Our last program nibbled at depicting local efforts to organize the national community,

providing Obama’s vision of change with a more effective seat at the table, as it confronts opponents unwilling to change their eating habits. This month we’ll be looking at another means of buttressing our seat at the table in Ventura County, by using Obama campaign devices to network advocates of constructive change.
Ventura County is just emerging as a Blue county. During this transition, disillusioned Republicans and decline-to-state voters, among others, need a ready means to associate with the local Democratic Obama agenda and organizations. Lacking local TV and adequate print media, the Democratic message will be increasingly sought elsewhere. Our February speaker, Brian Leshon, is providing new avenues to get our local message out through the Ventura County Democratic Party website,

www.venturacountydemocrats.com. Op-eds, local news articles, and announcements of events may now be placed on that website by submitting them to www.thegoodclub@yahoo.com. For further information on submissions, call me at (805) 216 7672 (not the number incorrectly circulated in last month’s Contact List for the Executive Board). Better yet, come to the next meeting and listen to the pro who is updating county Democratic communications. That is a great way to reserve your seat at the table.

California Central Coast Transportation Needs: Another Head of the Hydra

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

MOVING THE CENTRAL COAST FORWARD was a meeting about regional transportation needs held on Saturday, January 31 in the cafeteria at Ventura College.

Hosted by ASERT, the Alliance for a Sustainable and Equitable Regional Transportation, and by CAUSE, the Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy, the meeting featured keynote speaker Senator Alan Lowenthal who chairs the California Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing. There was also a panel of speakers: Rick Cole, Ventura City Manager; Esperanza Martinez of the Los Angeles
Bus Riders’ Union; and Das Williams from the Santa Barbara City Council.

Senator Alan Lowenthal

Oh, yawn, right?  (Are you still with me after that first paragraph?)  Well, that’s what I thought when I almost didn’t show up at 8:30 in the morning on a Saturday.  I couldn’t even remember what e-mail or flyer orwhatever had caused the notation on my calendar.  But shortly after getting there and finding the coffee, I realized that I had stumbled upon one of the many battlefields where the final Armageddon is being waged with the beast that is devouring our planet and all life upon it.

Ventura County, incidentally, is not doing as well in the battle as are the counties to our north and south–as the three panel members made clear.

Rick Cole, Ventura’s City Manager, pointed out that we tossed “6,000 years of human culture into the trash can” when we started designing our cities around the automobile instead of around pedestrian traffic. Citing the fairgrounds “with a parking lot the size of Delaware” next to the beach where the runoff goes directly into the ocean, and the county government buildings, which are surrounded by acres of parking lots and can be reached only by car, Cole observed that we have a system in which our citizens who walk, who ride bikes, or take public transport are “separate and unequal.”  He noted that there are no homeless cars because there are laws ensuring that every building constructed has to have enough parking spaces provided.  And if people were treated with as much consideration as cars, there would be seven beds in shelters available for every homeless person.

Rick Cole, Ventura City Manager

Rick Cole, Ventura City Manager

Panelist Esperanza Martinez chronicled the success of the Los Angeles’ Bus Riders’ Union.  When the L.A. bus riders learned that buses were getting only 6% of available funding while highways were getting 70% and trains the rest, they got serious.  With action items such as “no seat, no fare” in which they refused to pay if no seats were available, and demonstrations against “transport racism,” they gradually got their share of the federal money to get natural gas fueled buses in L.A., and they saved the monthly bus pass, which is a lifeline for the working poor.

In both Los Angeles County and Santa Barbara County, voters approved a .5% sales tax to be used exclusively to fund transportation.  Ventura County has no such tax base for transportation.  This is a classic case of them that has gets. City Council Member Das Williams from Santa Barbara pointed out that when Los Angeles or Santa Barbara Counties petition the state or federal governments for assistance, they are able to demonstrate that they have money of their own for the projects.  Santa Barbara can go to Lois Capps and say, “We need three dollars; we’ve got two dollars.  Can you give us a dollar?”  Ventura County has to go to Lois Capps and say, “We need three dollars.  Can you give us three dollars?”  It’s not hard to figure out who’s likely to end up with three dollars.

Esperanza Martinez of the Los Angeles Bus Riders’ Union

Esperanza Martinez of the Los Angeles Bus Riders’ Union

Keynote speaker Alan Lowenthal, State Senator from Long Beach and chair of the Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing, made it clear that this wasn’t just a meeting about buses.  This was a meeting about social justice in all of its many aspects.  But once the speakers had made it clear that the issue of woefully inadequate public transportation is only one head of the beast (along with the wars, the economic collapse, the environmental devastation, the human rights atrocities, all the many aspects of the mess we’ve gotten ourselves into), some of us did talk about buses.

There were six workshop sessions.  There was one session on getting funding and results, one each on issues affecting bikes, buses, and trains, one on oil and environment, and one on how to use public transportation.  After the workshops there were breakout sessions where people exchanged information about transportation needs.

There’s something Orwellian about that phrase: “exchanged information about transportation needs.”  We’re talking about when you can’t get there from here—and you have to get there.  We’re talking about there being no buses that come within a mile of the adult education facility on Valentine Road in Ventura where many of the students are handicapped. We’re talking about mothers carrying a small child and pushing another in a stroller in heavy traffic along the shoulder of Victoria north of Gonzales to reach the Prototypes Program.  We’re talking about elderly people trying to reach Oxnard Airport from Ventura Avenue.  We’re talking about a man recently released from prison and on parole who doesn’t have a driver’s license but finally gets a job outside of Santa Paula but can’t get to work because the Vista buses don’t get there early enough so he’s fired.

California State Assembly Member, Pedro Nava, Santa Barbara City Counselmember, Das Williams, Program Host, Carmen Ramirez

California State Assembly Member, Pedro Nava, Santa Barbara City Counselmember, Das Williams, Program Host, Carmen Ramirez

State Senator Lowenthal commended the efforts that turned Ventura County blue in 2008.   But he also pointed out that transportation is a key to social justice and that counties with a population of over 500,000 are legally required by the Transportation Development Act to use a percentage of revenues for transportation.  Ventura County now has a population of 800,000 but continues to act like a rural county.  It certainly seems that our newly blue county’s Democrats need to be deployed to this battlefield.

Comparison Shop WalMart: No Significant Savings And Damage To Local Economy

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

I just got back from the Oxnard Wal-Mart.  I had to do a some justifying in order to go into a place I had solemnly sworn never to set foot in, but I finally convinced myself that going in and walking around just to see what I could see was not the same as shopping.  My curiosity had been stimulated by the Stop Wal-Mart Ventura Coalition, a group of citizens and organizations that are determined to prevent Wal-Mart from opening a supercenter on Victoria Avenue.

A visit to the coalition’s web site provided some interesting reading.  One page featured links to other community groups all over the country—including seven in California–that are also doing battle with Wal-Mart to keep this mega-retailer out of their cities.  I was particularly interested in the Bend, Oregon web page which provided information from Consumer Reports about Wal-Mart’s prices.  As it turns out, the popular mythology, fostered by Wal-Mart with billions in advertising, is just that: a myth.  It isn’t true.  All those ads saying, “Save money.  Live better.” are just some copywriter’s fantasy.

Former Wal-Mart executive Michael Bergdahl explained in his book What I Learned from Sam Walton, “Shopping cart comparisons will prove Wal-Mart’s prices are not the lowest on all items.  There is, however, a perception in the mind of the consumer that they are.  This perception has been strategically planted there by targeted advertising and marketing messages focused on Wal-Mart’s ‘everyday low prices’ campaign.  Consumers begin to believe that Wal-Mart has the lowest prices on everything so they stop doing comparison shopping.”

So, my interest aroused, I decided to see for myself.  I was aware of all the documented evils perpetrated by Wal-Mart in the supposed service of low prices: the exploitation of employees who are paid so little they have to rely on public assistance to survive, the pressures on suppliers to cut prices to the point that they have to outsource their manufacturing to countries where people labor in sweatshops for pennies a day, the destruction of local businesses in the towns invaded by Wal-Mart stores, all that stuff.  But I believed what everyone else evidently believes, that Wal-Mart has the lowest prices and therefore is helping low income families survive, particularly in this time of economic collapse.

I plunged into the belly of the beast, on the Sunday afternoon before Christmas yet.  Of course the traffic in the vicinity of Rose and Gonzales was horrendous, and the whole huge parking lot was packed for more than a city block in all directions.  Really, voters in Ventura who are in any doubt whatsoever about how to vote on the initiative that will be on the ballot next November 3rd owe  it to themselves to visit the Oxnard Wal-Mart.  Unless they have somehow developed a perverse taste for sleaze and squalor, the grime and ugliness of the place alone should convince them to keep a similar operation out of their city.

Entering the store, I found myself in a corridor of merchandise displayed under day-glo orange signs with white letters proclaiming “Unbeatable Prices.” Under each sign was a separate gift item: three pairs of bright colored polyester socks for $5; a collection of bath items, a bar of soap, bubble bath, shower gel, and bath crystals all in a plastic caddy, making the gift look larger than its contents, for $15; A set of holiday dishes decorated with Christmas trees claiming to be dishwasher, microwave, and conventional oven safe and Made in China for $15; twin sheets of cotton jersey, red with white snowflake designs for $18.92; a pet travelers seat saver, which seemed to be a throw for the dog to sit on, for $20; and a Stanley Homeowners Tool Kit for $28.

I’m not much of a shopper, but the prices on these items didn’t seem all that marvelous.  I had bought soap and bubble bath recently, the bar soap for under $2 and the bubble bath, a larger jar than on the Wal-Mart display, for about $3, but still there was no way to do exact comparison shopping because I didn’t recognize the brand name of the supplier.

I had to locate merchandise that I could also find elsewhere, so I wandered up and down seemingly endless aisles jammed with shopping carts and shoppers.  Most of the stuff piled on either side of the aisles, and in island displays where aisles crossed, were not likely to be encountered anywhere else for the purpose of comparison shopping.  In fact most were so garish and tacky that it seemed unlikely to encounter them even once, anywhere. For electronic equipment I would accept the verdict of Consumer Reports, which ranked Wal-Mart last in their listing of retailers such as Best Buy, Radio Shack, Circuit City, Target, and others.  Household products and groceries seemed the easiest to compare, so I started jotting down prices.

On my way home I stopped by a Vons store to compare some prices there with the ones from Wal-Mart.  A package 12.5 ounce package of “fun size” Butterfinger candies were two for $5 at Vons and $2.38 at Wal-Mart so you could save 12 cents by braving the crowds.  A jug of laundry detergent, 2x Ultra Tide with Febreeze, however, was on sale at Vons for $11.99 while Wal-Mart charged $13.97.  The Wal-Mart brand, Great Value, sugar frosted flakes were $2.98 while Vons generic flakes were two for $4.00.  The biggest savings I noted at Vons was for a gallon of whole milk selling for $2.99 or two gallons for $4.99.  A gallon of whole milk at Wal-Mart was $3.68.

The price differences were not dramatic, and broke both ways depending which item was being checked.  But I did come away from my brief stint of comparison shopping convinced that the notion that Wal-Mart prices provide huge savings is actually just another urban legend, and one fostered primarily by billions of advertising dollars.

So The High Cost of Low Prices, to quote the title of one book about Wal-Mart, is actually the high cost of our own gullibility.

RSS RSS Feed
Email Get new posts

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline